Re: Anyone have any heirloom varieties in the ground ?
I'd also say that PEC would enter into it. While any variety that someone grew somewhere in the period would, theoretically, be "period correct" in that it could have been used, there were some tomato varieties that were dominant. A lot of "heirloom varieties" today are the jaguar-skin pants of the garden, saved because they were/are different, not because they were common.
If canning companies bought whatever was being grown that would be suitable, they'd still end up with a few dominant varieties because those were the most common varieties on the market.
Here's my guess, but it's just a guess, based on how common it was in the period: The Large Red and to some extent the Smooth Large Red.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@gmail.com
Originally posted by OldKingCrow
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If canning companies bought whatever was being grown that would be suitable, they'd still end up with a few dominant varieties because those were the most common varieties on the market.
Here's my guess, but it's just a guess, based on how common it was in the period: The Large Red and to some extent the Smooth Large Red.
Hank Trent
hanktrent@gmail.com
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