Saturday 15 June 2019

Helsing Junction Blue tomato

For a few years now (ever since they mysteriously made their way into the country) I have been growing different varieties of high anthocyanin tomatoes.

High anthocyanin tomatoes turn dark blue to black where the sun hits them. Unlike the old heirloom varieties that were called black but were really a muddy brown, high anthocyanin tomatoes actually can be black.

Anthocyanins are a group of powerful antioxidants, darker varieties contain higher concentrations of these antioxidants so are presumably even healthier to eat than regular tomatoes. The early high anthocyanin lines such as ‘OSU blue’ were incredibly black, but didn’t taste all that amazing. Sadly they didn’t taste all that much better than store bought tomatoes.

These early released black varieties have been used in breeding efforts to create tomatoes that are black and also taste good, huge improvements have been made in this area and some of the more recent released high anthocyanin varieties are starting to taste pretty good.
Helsing Junction Blue tomato - not ripe yet

I have been growing a tomato called Helsing Junction Blue (or Helsing Junction Blues, I am unclear if it has an ‘s’ on the end). This variety is said to be bred by Tom Wagner and named after the Helsing Junction Farm in the Chahalis River Valley, Washington state. Normally I am not a fan of Tom Wagner’s tomatoes (other than a tomato named Verde Claro, which is truly exceptional), and normally I am not a huge fan of high anthocyanin tomatoes (although many of the newer varieties are actually really good), but this one yields well and tastes great.

Helsing Junction Blue grows into a tall and vigorous plant with regular leaf. It is an indeterminate variety, meaning it will fruit all season long until killed by frost, or can be grown as a perennial if protected from frosts. Being tall means they will need some form of staking or they will sprawl and cover a lot of space. Like many indeterminate varieties it is incredibly simple to grow from cuttings.

For me Helsing Junction Blue produces high yields of large cherry tomatoes over a long season, they are sweet and have a decent rich taste for a black tomato.

Early in the season this variety looks like any other, you can tell it is high anthocyanin as the stems get a purple tinge to them at times. Its flowers and unripe green fruit are round and look unremarkable.

Before the fruits ripen they start to turn purple, bright purple, it is almost unbelievable the purple they turn. I really wish they stayed this colour when they were ripe, but they don’t.

Helsing Junction Blue unripe fruits

Not ripe, but they look great!

Eventually they start to ripen, places the sun does not hit turn red, and anywhere that is hit by the sun turns black with red underneath. Higher exposure to ultraviolet light makes them darker, and strangely enough cool temperatures combined with high light intensity enhances the dark colouration.

This means that fruit produced in autumn is noticeably darker than fruit produced at the height of summer. It is only the skin that is black, inside the flesh of this variety is red.

Helsing Junction Blue - ripe fruit
Helsing Junction Blue, they do get much darker black than this

Once they have started to ripen you end up with a large plant covered in fruit from unripe to ripe, ranging from green, to an interesting purple, through to red and black.

I have had people stop and stare at my plants and ask me questions, bewildered that such interesting colours can actually be real. People always want to eat a bright purple ones, I try to explain that purple are not ripe and the black and red ones are ripe. They taste those and like them, but are always a little disappointed that I won’t let them eat the unripe purple ones.
People want to eat the purple ones, but they aren't ripe yet

Helsing Junction Blue tomatoes have a nice, reasonably rich taste, and are pleasantly sweet. I have never cooked with them by themselves so can’t comment on that. We have frozen them in with other tomatoes and cooked with them all mixed together, the results vary but the number and composition of varieties of tomatoes included in these frozen packs also varies considerably.

Being a cherry tomato means they are often eaten whole and are good used in salads. My kids happily pick them and eat them from the plant whenever they walk past the plants and I am not watching. Yeah, they think they are being sneaky but I know they do this, I just don’t try to stop them because they know not to pick the ones with string that were used for breeding and/or isolated for seed saving.

I recorded Helsing Junction Blue as taking 166 days from planting the seed until picking the first ripe fruit (this is often referred to as 60 to 70 days by most seed sellers, but they don't start counting until transplant).

Towards the end of the season when the weather cools the fruits looks its darkest, and the stems take on more purple colouration. No tomato tastes its best when ripened in cool weather (or if ripened in warm weather but then put in the fridge for a few hours – seriously why do people ever do that), and Helsing Junction Blue is no exception. I have never been overly impressed with the taste of any variety of tomato that ripened when the weather was cold.

Some of my plants flower through light frosts, then they start to produce flowers and fruit that are odd. I don’t know how to explain, some fruit are almost like they are inside out. Some of the flowers look like they produce fruit before the flowers open and had no chance to produce pollen.

I don’t know if they are parthenocarpic and set fruit without pollination or if something else is happening here. I have never had these weird fruit ripen as heavier frosts kills them off first, so I don’t know what they will look like or taste like or if these late fruits contain any seed. I assume these oddities are caused by the cold temperatures, perhaps it is a trait from one of the wild species that was used to breed in the dark colour.

Fruits forming before the flowers even opened




Anthocyanin concentrating in the leaf tips during high UV and low temperatures
Weird fruits forming before the flowers opened
Based on their taste, yield, resistance to disease, and impressive looking fruit I am pretty happy with Helsing Junction Blue tomatoes. I don’t grow them each year as I have far more varieties than I can fit in the garden in any given year, but they are in my rotation to be grown every two or three years.

 I sell seeds of several varieties of tomato as wel as a bunch of other perennial vegetables and herbs on my for sale page.

2 comments:

  1. They look great! I've had no luck with dark skinned tomatoes, having planted them expecting that being "Russian" they might thrive in my colder climate. But not a fruit ripened this year, none of my various types did, whether determinate and indeterminate, beefsteak, tommy toes, yellow skinned , grown in the green house or outside in raised beds or pots. All the plants set a reasonable number of fruit, but not one fruit ripened on the vine. My wiki-ing leads me to think it was because they didn't get enough tempos below 25 degrees, but then why did my Newcastle NSW friend's plants produce like mad? Yesterday I met two neighbours; they live within a circle 10k's across,that's a neighbour in the country, and one had not one flower set, and the other like myself not one fruit ripen. They both grew pumpkins (I get frosts most months so don't bother) and the fruit when being set out to toughen up, all went "mushy". Pretty disheartening. I got two black tomato fruit which ripened on a bench in the greenhouse after some weeks of being picked. I made a lot of green tomato chutney, but oh, I missed my fruit plucked from the vine and eaten right then and there. Fran (whine over)

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    Replies
    1. Hi Fran,

      Where do you live that is so cold? I know a few growers in cooler areas so I can ask what works for them. I am near Canberra, winters are cold and long but summers are usually short but hot.

      I would try not to be too disheartened. This summer was the worst I have ever had for growing vegetables. I am not sure why, but many things failed that normally thrive for me. It was hot and dry, but I have grown in hotter and drier in other places. I got to eat a few good tomatoes, but nowhere near as many as I would have expected.
      The old Russian varieties that are called black are usually more of a muddy brown. Some of them taste absolutely amazing, others less so. Many of the Russian tomatoes (regardless of colour) do well in the cold, and many have bold and impressive flavours, but this is a generalisation and there are some bland ones and some that take forever to ripen and need a surprising amount of heat.

      Many of these newer high anthocyanin (blue or black) tomatoes such as Helsing Junction Blue have 'OSU blue' somewhere in their heritage. That was the first black tomato and was bred in Oregon State University. They crossbred domestic tomatoes with wild tomatoes to incorporate genes for the black/blue colouration.

      It was exciting news when they first did it, and I considered trying to recreate the cross myself and do some breeding of black tomatoes as importing tomato seed is virtually impossible. Then someone (not me) got seeds of a few high anthocyanin varieties into Australia and I didn't need to.

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