Determinate Tomato Varieties You Can Depend On

, written by Barbara Pleasant us flag

Tomatoes

Imagine a tomato that accepts cool growing conditions, grows into a compact bush that needs no pruning, and that can be supported with simple stakes. About 45 days after planting, the vigorous plant explodes with blossoms, which become huge trusses of tomatoes that are ripe and ready three weeks later.

I have just described a determinate tomato, a type that deserves wider use in vegetable gardens. In addition to their obvious advantage in climates with short, cool summers, determinate tomatoes work well in hot climates, where good growing conditions end in early summer. They are also useful in humid climates like mine, where tomato diseases can sabotage full-season tomatoes just as they ripen in late summer. In any climate, determinate tomatoes are great for preserving because they ripen their crop all at once, usually within a three-week period. The plants can then be pulled and composted, making room for an autumn crop of leafy greens.

Tomato seedlings

Supporting Determinate Tomatoes

The vast majority of garden tomatoes are either long-vined indeterminate (cordon) varieties, or an in-between category called “vigorous determinates,” of which ‘Roma’ and ‘Celebrity’ are good examples. These and other vigorous determinate varieties set a big initial crop, but with good care they will keep on going. True determinates will not do this, because each stem tip ends in a fruiting cluster.

Because every stem of a strongly determinate tomato will bear fruit, it is important not to pinch them out. Instead, encourage the plants to grow into sturdy bushes, which they can do on their own with minimal support. Many smaller determinate tomatoes are easy to grow in pots, while larger varieties behave themselves in ring-style tomato cages. This cannot be said of sprawling indeterminate varieties.

Best Tasting Early Determinate Tomatoes

Determinate tomatoes are often faulted for poor flavour, an unfair assessment that does not factor in the risk between fast-maturing determinates that bear a dependable crop, or slower-growing tomatoes that fail due to weather, pests or diseases. Additionally, determinate varieties do not set large fruits, and tomatoes do a better job of allocating resources to small fruits compared to large ones. As long as sunny weather reigns while the fruits are ripening, the determinate tomato varieties listed here can be counted upon to taste wonderful.

“Tomato
Tomato ‘Ida Gold’

Among fast-maturing varieties that start ripening about 60 days after transplanting, egg-shaped ‘Siberian’ sets a high standard for flavour, which is similar in many respects to Canadian-bred ‘ Beaverlodge’. Both are knee-high salad tomatoes, while the fruits of round ‘Glacier’ and ‘Sophie's Choice’ are large enough to slice and dry, or to preserve as tangy tomato sauce. Bred to bear in Idaho’s short summers, beautiful orange ‘Ida Gold’, shown loaded with green fruits in the photo above delivers on all of a determinate tomato’s promises – early, easy, productive and tastes great.

Cherry tomatoes are well-represented among early determinate tomatoes, and a novel new yellow-gold bush cherry, ‘Patio Choice Yellow’, has been named as a 2017 All America Selections winner. Similar to the popular ‘Tumbling Tom Yellow’, ‘Patio Choice Yellow’ matures into a 2-foot mound of sweet golden cherry tomatoes when staked, or it can be grown in a hanging basket.

“Tomato
Tomato ‘Patio Choice Yellow'

More Delicious Determinate Tomato Varieties

Not all determinate tomatoes are extra earlies, and full-season varieties rated at 75 to 80 days to maturity offer easy-to-manage harvests from big, robust bushes. Purple-blushed ‘Black Sea Man’ is a delicious Russian heirloom with potato-leaf foliage that grows to 4 feet (1.2 m) or more. Another contender is Oregon-bred ‘Santiam’, which will set nearly seedless fruits even under stressful conditions. In hot summer areas where disease pressure is relentless, determinate ‘Amelia’ provides rare resistance to Tomato Spotted Wilt Virus, and its red fruits ripen ahead of summer’s worst insects.

I am not saying that all of one’s tomato selections should be determinate varieties, but rather that they should be used more often when your goal is to grow a uniform crop of tomatoes under low-stress conditions. Space-saving and dependable, determinate tomatoes can be an essential component in a well-balanced tomato planting plan.

Bugs, Beneficial Insects and Plant Diseases

< All Guides

Garden Planning Apps

If you need help designing your vegetable garden, try our Vegetable Garden Planner.
Garden Planning Apps and Software

Vegetable Garden Pest Warnings

Want to Receive Alerts When Pests are Heading Your Way?

If you've seen any pests or beneficial insects in your garden in the past few days please report them to The Big Bug Hunt and help create a warning system to alert you when bugs are heading your way.

Show Comments



Comments

 
"I have Roma (determinate) and Ox heart and Gross Lisse (indeterminate) - 4 of each. The Roma are no trouble, early and good crop. The others are a bit later with fewer, larger fruit but need supports. Is there a determinate tomato which is a bit later than Roma and with larger fruit? Growing conditions - Melbourne, Australia where the temp can at times get to over 40 C and quite dry (although I water as required)."
Don on Sunday 20 January 2019
"I like what I read. I love veggie gardening and Tomatoes are my favourite plant. "
Johan on Tuesday 22 January 2019
"This website has a .co.uk extension yet this article talks about "The plants can then be pulled and composted, making room for a fall crop of leafy greens." ???"
Billy on Tuesday 13 December 2022
"Hi Billy. We also have a .com site but this American term got past me on the .co.uk version. I'll get the article updated to say autumn rather than fall for UK readers. Thanks for spotting this! "
Garden Planner Customer Support on Tuesday 13 December 2022

Add a Comment

Add your own thoughts on the subject of this article:
(If you have difficulty using this form, please use our Contact Form to send us your comment, along with the title of this article.)

 
   
(We won't display this on the website or use it for marketing)



Captcha


(Please enter the code above to help prevent spam on this article)



By clicking 'Add Comment' you agree to our Terms and Conditions