

November 2nd, 2023 – USDA Hardiness Zone 6B (always check the zone when reading about gardening! What the author is saying might not apply to your location at all if they’re in a very different growing zone)
A hard frost ended the season here this week – temperatures below freezing for two nights in a row meant the end of the road for our outdoor tomato ambitions. I’m just putting up this blogpost to either remind or inform people that green tomatoes will (or at least might) ripen nicely if they’re brought in before the first freezing temperatures of the season and stored correctly. I did that for the first time last year and was pleasantly surprised at how well that worked out. Even very green tomatoes ripened nicely and were completely usable. The video that I watched on Youtube showed that tomatoes should probably not be stacked more than a single layer high; I stacked some in two layers (small tomatoes) and it seemed to be ok.
This blogger says that completely immature and shiny tomatoes will not ripen, which is bad news because this year most of the green tomatoes that I brought in are completely immature and shiny. I’ll do an update to report back whether the green tomatoes from this year ripened as well as the ones from last year. The pictures shown above are the tomatoes from last year (2022) in the picture on the left, and our 2023 crop of greenies on the right.
Don’t let those laggard tomatoes go to waste!