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-   -   Maglia Rosa is excellent for containers and small spaces (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=30721)

BigVanVader July 31, 2015 05:37 PM

Yeah no worries, its just if you made one I'm sure it'd be great. I do notice the off taste you reference. For me its a odd bitter after taste that lingers and makes me not want to eat anymore.

Fred Hempel July 31, 2015 06:21 PM

I am not sure that taste can be removed, without removing the "blue" (for some of us who are sensitive to it). But I am hopeful that one of the excellent breeders working on blues can make a blue tomato that I find just great (with no reservations). I am going to taste some new blue varieties at a variety trial in a few weeks, and I hear there are supposed to be some good Blue tomatoes included.

[QUOTE=BigVanVader;495301]Yeah no worries, its just if you made one I'm sure it'd be great. I do notice the off taste you reference. For me its a odd bitter after taste that lingers and makes me not want to eat anymore.[/QUOTE]

BigVanVader July 31, 2015 07:26 PM

Good to know they are still working on some. They really help draw the eye to my cherry mixes but they also are the ones people most often want to taste first, which can hurt sales. I now steer them to others, like your Bumblebee varieties, but even then some insist on trying the blues first.

Fred Hempel July 31, 2015 07:39 PM

There is lots of work in the "blue" area, because they are so fascinating. The new holy grail (in addition to OP Sungold).


[QUOTE=BigVanVader;495344]Good to know they are still working on some. They really help draw the eye to my cherry mixes but they also are the ones people most often want to taste first, which can hurt sales. I now steer them to others, like your Bumblebee varieties, but even then some insist on trying the blues first.[/QUOTE]

Fusion_power August 1, 2015 03:19 AM

I'm another that tastes an off whang with high anthocyanin tomatoes. I have one breeding line that is getting close to eliminating it. Time will tell if it is good enough to continue.

AdrianaG August 1, 2015 07:28 AM

"off whang"? I love it when you guys get technical !��

AdrianaG August 1, 2015 07:29 AM

[QUOTE=Fusion_power;495440]I'm another that tastes an off whang with high anthocyanin tomatoes.[/QUOTE]

"off whang"? I love it when you guys get technical...or is that Alabama dialect?:)):)):))

Fred Hempel September 8, 2015 08:11 PM

In the interest of fairness -- [URL="http://baianicchia.blogspot.com/2015/09/what-is-wrong-with-maglia-rosa.html"]everything that is wrong with Maglia Rosa[/URL].

NewWestGardener September 11, 2015 03:06 PM

Everything is true except for the "dense foliage" part, my plants are pretty bald. I like the variety so much I was looking to see if I could snip a few suckers to root and overwinter, no such luck, the plants are loaded with fruit, on every branch. No new flowers at this point.
Next year, I am going to use them to edge my tall raised beds, so they will be trailing down the sides, then the fruit would not have to have contact with soil, or need to be trellised. As they are so compact, I could also start them inside really early without getting too big to handle.

They are way more productive than Blush, or Pink or Green tiger, is it so for anyone else?

Fred Hempel September 11, 2015 03:25 PM

NewWestGardener

They are more productive than the other artisan tomatoes, although Purple and Sunrise Bumblebee are pretty dang productive too -- probably about the same as MR.

I am also considering ways to grow Maglia Rosa so that it "hangs" over a rudimentary raised bed (to reduce soil contact, as you suggest)

Fred Hempel September 11, 2015 03:28 PM

Note: We now have fresh [URL="http://www.growartisan.com"]Maglia Rosa and Orange Jazz[/URL] seed. The two varieties we are most excited about this year.

NewWestGardener September 11, 2015 03:52 PM

Fred, thanks for making this variety available, a truly great find. I planted them because I read this thread you posted.
Yes, Purple Bumblebee and Sunrise B.B. are also very productive, and their leaves remain green and lush still, they will be invited back next year. My Purple Bumblebee also throws out some mini beefsteaks, very cute, it is outstanding.
I bought the Artisan pack, so I got to try all of them.

Fred Hempel October 11, 2015 12:52 PM

I really like the "mini-beefsteaks" of Purple Bumblebee too. Sunrise Bumblebee does the same, but not with as much frequency.




[QUOTE=NewWestGardener;504354]Fred, thanks for making this variety available, a truly great find. I planted them because I read this thread you posted.
Yes, Purple Bumblebee and Sunrise B.B. are also very productive, and their leaves remain green and lush still, they will be invited back next year. My Purple Bumblebee also throws out some mini beefsteaks, very cute, it is outstanding.
I bought the Artisan pack, so I got to try all of them.[/QUOTE]

Greatgardens October 14, 2015 03:27 PM

Does it do well in the "always damp" conditions of an EarthBox? I plan to try one as a single plant in an EB next season.

I don't really understand the varying comments about foliage. Aside from differing opinions as to what is "sparse" and what is "dense," does it have his type of variability? Or maybe it has a strong response to fertilizers?

-GG

Fred Hempel October 15, 2015 10:49 AM

I think Maglia Rosa would be fine in an earth box, but you would really want to make sure that the fruits are picked at peak flavor, which would probably be much earlier than peak color in an earth box.

Maglia Rosa has "wispy" leaves which are typically correlated with sparse foliage and short internodes, which are typically associated with dense foliage. So, it isn't easy to neatly classify it into sparse or dense.


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