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Jelly Beans (VF) Hybrid Tomato
Bursting with Sweet Flavor
 ( 4 customer reviews)
These little gems have a fantastic, sweet flavor
you’re sure to love! Disease-resistant vines bear
multiple clusters of 15-30 grape-size fruits that
resist cracking. Indeterminate. 66 DAYS. Tomato plants are not available in ME and MT.Seeds will be shipped within 5-10 days of your order. Plants ship only in the spring. If our spring shipping season is closed, your order will be shipped the following spring.
Product Details
Zones: 3 - 9 annual Height: about 6 - 8 ft (needs staking) Spacing: 18 - 24" between plants, 3-5 ft between rows Depth: 1/4 inch Spread: 3 ft Sun/Shade: full sun Days To Maturity: 66 days from transplant
| Comments: Plant is indeterminate, producing 15-30 fruit per cluster. The fruit are oblong in shape. The fruit is bright red, bite sized and has a fantastic flavor that you will fall in love with. Show good signs of resistance to cracking and looks just like that of a grape. Disease tolerance to verticillium wilt, fusarium wilt race 1 and 2, alternararia stem canker and stemphylium. Indeterminate tomatoes continue to grow, flower, and set fruit until killed by the first frost in the fall. Accordingly, the harvest from indeterminate varieties often extends over a 2 or 3 month period. Yields are generally heavier than determinate types, but are usually later to mature. Indeterminate tomatoes are tall, sprawling plants which often perform best when supported by stakes or a tall wire cage. Indeterminate varieties that are staked can be planted 1 1/2 to 2 feet apart in the row. Allow a 2- to 3-foot-spacing for indeterminate plants grown in wire cages, while tomatoes allowed to sprawl over the ground should be spaced 3 to 4 feet apart., RESTRICTED STATES, AE, AK, GU, HI, ME, MT, PR Shipping: View Shipping Schedule Jelly Beans (VF) Hybrid Tomato Ships In Both Spring And Fall
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Customer Reviews Overall Rating: Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers Sort Reviews: Newest | Oldest | Highest Rating | Lowest Rating  - Tuesday, August 16, 2011 Awesome tomatoes! Reviewed By: Kelley (Williamston, SC) Awesome taste! I used to hate small salad size tomatoes but growing these changed my mind. These are the right size...not too big...and taste fantastic! The skin isn't tough either! We grew several and always had some to share even with this years crazy heat.  - Wednesday, March 16, 2011 Tasty tomatoes Reviewed By: Christy (Casper, Wyoming) Yummy tomatoes. Produced a good quantity even with poor care, poor weather, and poor lighting. Because of our short season in Wyoming and being a little late planting them, I had to move them inside where they don't get great light to finish riping. Tomatoes were yummy. My 3 year old loves them and eats them like candy. They got a little sick looking over the winter, but are producing a nice crop of tomatoes now in March even though they are supposed to be annuals. I'm getting early tomatoes and loving it.  - Sunday, September 19, 2010 One Tough Plant Reviewed By: John (Broken Arrow, Oklahoma) I can’t help but wonder if I got the right seeds in the packet because my Jelly Bean tomatoes don’t look like the picture – they are more pear shaped than oblong. Whatever the case, this is one tough plant that struggled with our 100+ degree heat, some disease, my late planting, an invasion of horn worms, probably less than adequate light, blossom drop and questionable soil fertility. The result? The plant has bounced back from the aforementioned obstacles and is growing like gangbusters, spilling well over my three foot cage. Luscious green growth is appearing peppered with new blossoms. I just picked my first handful of absolutely stunning tomatoes and there are loads more coming on. The taste is the perfect tomato flavor in my book. Not too acid, not too sweet. The skins are thin and tender as well. Fantastic. Can’t wait to plant it again under better conditions. Read More Reviews
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Jelly Beans (VF) Hybrid Tomato
Bursting with Sweet Flavor
(4
customer reviews)
These little gems have a fantastic, sweet flavor
you’re sure to love! Disease-resistant vines bear
multiple clusters of 15-30 grape-size fruits that
resist cracking. Indeterminate. 66 DAYS. Tomato plants are not available in ME and MT.
Seeds will be shipped within 5-10 days of your order.
Plants ship only in the spring. If our spring shipping season is closed, your order will be shipped the following spring.
|
Product Details
Zones: 3 - 9 annual Height: about 6 - 8 ft (needs staking) Spacing: 18 - 24" between plants, 3-5 ft between rows Depth: 1/4 inch Spread: 3 ft Sun/Shade: full sun Days To Maturity: 66 days from transplant
| Comments: Plant is indeterminate, producing 15-30 fruit per cluster. The fruit are oblong in shape. The fruit is bright red, bite sized and has a fantastic flavor that you will fall in love with. Show good signs of resistance to cracking and looks just like that of a grape. Disease tolerance to verticillium wilt, fusarium wilt race 1 and 2, alternararia stem canker and stemphylium. Indeterminate tomatoes continue to grow, flower, and set fruit until killed by the first frost in the fall. Accordingly, the harvest from indeterminate varieties often extends over a 2 or 3 month period. Yields are generally heavier than determinate types, but are usually later to mature. Indeterminate tomatoes are tall, sprawling plants which often perform best when supported by stakes or a tall wire cage. Indeterminate varieties that are staked can be planted 1 1/2 to 2 feet apart in the row. Allow a 2- to 3-foot-spacing for indeterminate plants grown in wire cages, while tomatoes allowed to sprawl over the ground should be spaced 3 to 4 feet apart., RESTRICTED STATES, AE, AK, GU, HI, ME, MT, PR Shipping: View Shipping Schedule Jelly Beans (VF) Hybrid Tomato Ships In Both Spring And Fall
|
Customer Reviews
Overall Rating:
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers
Sort Reviews: Newest |
Oldest |
Highest Rating |
Lowest Rating 
- Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Awesome tomatoes!
Reviewed By:
Kelley (Williamston, SC)
Awesome taste! I used to hate small salad size tomatoes but growing these changed my mind. These are the right size...not too big...and taste fantastic! The skin isn't tough either! We grew several and always had some to share even with this years crazy heat.

- Wednesday, March 16, 2011
Tasty tomatoes
Reviewed By:
Christy (Casper, Wyoming)
Yummy tomatoes. Produced a good quantity even with poor care, poor weather, and poor lighting. Because of our short season in Wyoming and being a little late planting them, I had to move them inside where they don't get great light to finish riping. Tomatoes were yummy. My 3 year old loves them and eats them like candy. They got a little sick looking over the winter, but are producing a nice crop of tomatoes now in March even though they are supposed to be annuals. I'm getting early tomatoes and loving it.

- Sunday, September 19, 2010
One Tough Plant
Reviewed By:
John (Broken Arrow, Oklahoma)
I can’t help but wonder if I got the right seeds in the packet because my Jelly Bean tomatoes don’t look like the picture – they are more pear shaped than oblong. Whatever the case, this is one tough plant that struggled with our 100+ degree heat, some disease, my late planting, an invasion of horn worms, probably less than adequate light, blossom drop and questionable soil fertility. The result? The plant has bounced back from the aforementioned obstacles and is growing like gangbusters, spilling well over my three foot cage. Luscious green growth is appearing peppered with new blossoms. I just picked my first handful of absolutely stunning tomatoes and there are loads more coming on. The taste is the perfect tomato flavor in my book. Not too acid, not too sweet. The skins are thin and tender as well. Fantastic. Can’t wait to plant it again under better conditions.
Read More Reviews