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Tomato Cookie F1 mixed seedlings

Solanum lycopersicum Cookie F1 Mix
Tomato, Love Apple

4,6/5
6 reviews
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Simplement parfait.

Marine, 28/05/2020

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This plant carries a 6 months recovery warranty

More information

Value-for-money
Original hybrid variety, producing clusters of pointed cherry tomatoes, weighing 35 to 40g, with a tiger-red colour streaked with dark green. It is an early, productive and disease-resistant variety. Very tasty, these tomatoes are used in salads or as an appetiser. The Tomato is a plant that is grown as an annual, requiring warmth and a rich soil. The young plants of the Cookie F1 Tomato should be planted from April to June, after the last frost, for a harvest from July to September.
Ease of cultivation
Beginner
Height at maturity
1.80 m
Spread at maturity
50 cm
Exposure
Sun
Soil moisture
Moist soil
Best planting time May
Recommended planting time April to June
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Harvest time July to October
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Description

The Cookie F1 Tomato Mix - Striped Cherry Tomato is an original hybrid variety, producing clusters of pointed cherry tomatoes weighing 35 to 40g, with a dark green striped red colour. It is an early, productive and disease-resistant variety. Very tasty, these tomatoes can be used in salads or as an appetiser. The Tomato is a plant that is grown as an annual, requiring heat and rich soil. The plants of the Cookie F1 Tomato are planted from April to June, after the last frost, for a harvest from July to September.

The Tomato is native to South America and Central America. Several varieties were already cultivated by the Incas long before the arrival of the Conquistadors. The term "Tomato" comes from the Inca Tomatl and refers to both the plant and the fruit that comes from it. It is one of the many foods that came to us from the New World, along with beans, corn, squash, potatoes, and chili peppers. The Tomato took much longer to reach our taste buds. For good reason: for a long time, it was cultivated for its aesthetic and medicinal qualities, but it was considered toxic due to its resemblance to the fruit of the Mandrake, another Solanaceae. It only became a regular part of our diets from the beginning of the 20th century.

The Tomato is a perennial herbaceous plant in tropical climates, but it is grown as an annual in our latitudes. It becomes woody over time and produces small insignificant yellow flowers gathered in cymes that will turn into fruits. Tomatoes can be grown in open ground but can also be grown in containers on a balcony, with a preference for varieties with a compact growth habit.

It is a fruit vegetable that has many nutritional benefits. Low in calories like most vegetables, rich in water, it contains a very interesting molecule: lycopene, a powerful antioxidant. It is also rich in vitamin C, provitamin A, and trace elements.

In terms of cooking, tomatoes can be eaten raw or cooked in many ways: in salads or as an appetiser, grilled, stuffed, marinated, confit, in ratatouille, as a sauce etc. They come in all colours, shapes, and sizes. Take advantage of this and grow several varieties in your garden to vary the pleasures!

Harvesting: Harvest periods vary depending on the earliness: early varieties are harvested from 55 to 70 days after planting, mid-season varieties from 70 to 85 days, and late varieties beyond 85 days. Harvesting is done when the tomato has reached its final colour and when its texture, while remaining firm, shows a slight softening. For better preservation, make sure to pick the fruit with its peduncle. Be careful, immature fruits, stems, and leaves contain solanine and should not be consumed.

Storage: The optimal storage temperature for tomatoes is between 10 and 15°C (50 and 59°F). Refrigeration is possible but alters the taste qualities of the fruits. For longer storage, tomatoes can be confit, dried, frozen, canned, or cooked into jam. To confit them, cut your tomatoes in half and collect the juice. Place your half tomatoes face up on the baking sheet of your oven. Season with salt, pepper, sugar, and bake at a very low temperature for at least one hour. Remove your tomatoes, store them in a glass jar, and top with olive oil.

Gardener's tip: To limit watering, we recommend mulching the soil with thin successive layers of grass clippings, if possible mixed with dead leaves. This protection, which keeps the soil moist, also limits weeding.

Harvest

Harvest time July to October
Type of vegetable Fruit vegetable
Vegetable colour red
Size of vegetable Small
Interest Flavour, Nutritional value, Colour, Productive
Use Cooking

Plant habit

Height at maturity 1.80 m
Spread at maturity 50 cm
Growth rate normal

Foliage

Foliage persistence Deciduous
Foliage colour dark green
Product reference42021

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Planting and care

Tomato plants are easy to grow. Sunlight and warmth are crucial for the success of this cultivation. Tomatoes prefer rich, well-draining, and deeply tilled soils. A few months before planting, add mature compost after loosening the soil. If your soil is heavy, add some sand at the time of planting.

Place the plants in a sunny and heated location: the temperature should never drop below 12-14°C (53.6-57.2°F), otherwise the foliage will turn yellow and the plant's growth will stop. When the plants reach a height of about 15cm (6in), transplant them into the ground if the outside temperatures allow it.

Planting in the ground should be done once the risk of frost has passed, usually after mid-May. Choose a very sunny and sheltered spot. Space the plants 50 cm (20in) apart in rows and 70 cm (28in) between rows if you prune, or 1m (3ft) in all directions for unpruned cultivation. Dig a hole (3 times the volume of the root ball), add some well-decomposed compost at the bottom of the hole. Place your plant, which can be buried up to the first leaves, then backfill. Firm the soil, create a basin around the base, and water generously. Be careful not to wet the leaves to protect your plants from fungal diseases.

Install stakes (quickly after planting to avoid damaging the roots). Mulch at the base of the plants. Water regularly as irregular watering can lead to a calcium deficiency, resulting in a condition commonly known as 'blossom end rot'.

Furthermore, tomatoes, like potatoes, are susceptible to late blight. This is a fungal disease caused by the Phytophthora infestans fungus. Late blight develops in hot and humid weather. Small spots appear, white on the undersides of leaves and green-grey on top. To reduce the risks, space the plants adequately and avoid watering the foliage. In terms of crop rotation, wait 4 years before growing a plant from the Solanaceae family in the same location and do not cultivate them in neighboring rows. If necessary, spray with Bordeaux mixture or preparations such as horsetail or garlic decoction.

Less common, tomato cultivation in pots is nonetheless possible by choosing varieties with small fruits and placing the pot in a very sunny location.

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Cultivation

Best planting time May
Recommended planting time April to June

Care

Soil moisture Tolerant
Disease resistance Good

Intended location

Type of use Container, Vegetable garden, Greenhouse, Conservatory
Ease of cultivation Beginner
Soil light
Exposure Sun
Soil pH Any
Soil type Silty-loamy (rich and light), 130
4,6/5
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