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Cherokee Purple | |
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Cherokee purple is a dusky red with green shoulders when ripe
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Tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) | |
Maturity | 80 days |
Type | Heirloom |
Vine | Indeterminate |
Plant height | 9 feet |
Fruit weight | 16 oz |
Leaf | Regular leaf |
Color | Dusky red, green shoulders |
Shape | Beefsteak |
Cherokee Purple is the name of a very old variety of tomato that develops a fruit with a deep, dusky-rose color while maintaining a somewhat greenish hue near the stem when mature for eating. The deep crimson interior and clear skin combination give it its distinctive color. It was one of the first of the darker color group of tomatoes sometimes described as "blacks"; the variety Purple Calabash, with its highly irregularly shaped fruits, arose in a very few seed catalogs in the mid 1900s. Southern Exposure Seed Exchange was the first seed company to offer Cherokee Purple, released in limited quantity in 1993.
Heirloom tomato expert Craig LeHoullier received seeds of an unnamed purple tomato from John of Sevierville, Tennessee in 1990. Green said that the tomato had originated with the Cherokees more than 100 years previously. LeHoullier named the tomato "Cherokee Purple" and sent seeds to the Southern Exposure Seed Exchange (SESE). Jeff McCormack, the owner of SESE, said that the tomato "tasted fine, but was kind of ugly -- people may not like it." SESE featured the Cherokee Purple in the 1993 seed catalog.[1][2][3] LeHoullier distributed Cherokee Purple seeds to several marker growers and one of them, Alex Hitt, who lived in North Carolina, had an immediate success growing and and selling the tomato despite its ugly appearance. The tomato was described "as looking like a leg bruise." [4]
Cherokee Purple tomatoes are beefsteak in style. They are also notable for having a dense, juicy texture, with small seed locules irregularly scattered throughout the flesh. The comparatively dark interior color is enhanced by the tendency of the seeds to be surrounded by green gel. In 1995, a skin color mutation of Cherokee Purple arose in Craig LeHoullier's North Carolina garden. It was named Cherokee Chocolate, and the yellow skin gives the variety a brownish mahogany hue. Cherokee Green arose in Craig's garden in 1997 from a planting of Cherokee Chocolate. It is one of several tomatoes whose flesh stays green when it ripens; the skin color is yellow, which provides a guide to indicate when the tomato is ripe and ready for harvest.
The Cherokee purple tomato is most commonly available in the summer and fall. This tomato is best enjoyed fresh and is often used in BLT sandwiches and salads. It can also be used when making pizza and pasta.[5]
NPR story on the origins of the Cherokee Purple [1]
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