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Most Popular Varieties
Varieties rated most often. Not necessarily the highest rated.
   
Top 10 Rated Varieties
   
   


Which varieties are best
for your garden?
Curious which vegetable varieties might grow best in your garden? Cornell researchers are, too. This site compiles information from your fellow gardeners to help you decide what to grow. Read more about this Citizen Science program. The information you supply can also influence breeding efforts and seed availability.

View ratings

Search (box at left and on every page) or browse to see detailed descriptions of more than 5,000 vegetable varieties and how other gardeners have rated many of them.

Rate varieties

Share your own opinions. Create a profile and let your fellow gardeners build on your experiences of what worked and what didn't in your garden. If you've already created a profile, login before rating varieties.

Need Help?

If you are not familiar with using on-line forms, see How To Use This Site to preview the site's features before you begin.

Help promote Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners

Help us spread the word about this site. Use these promotional materials to recruit gardeners in your area to rate and review varieties.

  • News release. Help spread the word through your newsletter, Master Gardener group, local media, bloggers, etc. Also available as a Word .doc.

  • Bookmarks. This .pdf file has eight Vegetable Varieties For Gardeners bookmarks on a sheet. We print them out on card stock and cut them to size to provide people with an easy reminder of the the website address.

  • Flier. This .pdf file has little more information for interested gardeners than the bookmark and can be printed on regular paper and in color or black and white.

  • PowerPoint. This PowerPoint (.ppt file) provides a 5 minute introduction to the Vegetable Varieties For Gardeners project and website. Each slide is meant to be self explanatory so you can set it to automatically move from one slide to the next, have it loop if it is part of a display or print out each slide on a regular sheet of paper then laminate each and place in a binder for displays where no computer is available. Here's a .pdf version for easy printing.

  • Poster. (Screen-sized .jpg file.) We have printed and laminated this colorful 2 by 3 foot poster for displays. If you are interested in a purchasing a copy please contact Lori Bushway (ljb7@cornell.edu). We can customize the lower right section with your organization's name, print the poster, laminate it and ship it to you for $30.
Comments or feedback? Email Craig Cramer: cdc25@cornell.edu
kids conducting tomato taste test

vvi logo Vegetable
Varieties
Investigation


Vvi is a new intergenerational citizen science project that bridges the technology divide.

Through this real-world opportunity, youth connect with gardeners in their community, learn survey skills, and explore biodiversity through the whimsical world of vegetable varieties.

Find out how you can get involved!


In the news

Vegetable Varieties website featured in Mother Earth News - Magazine's editors checked out your reviews before writing America’s Favorite Tomatoes in their Feb./Mar. issue.

See also: 'Amazon.com' for vegetables helps gardeners pick and choose their varieties in the Cornell Chronicle.
heirloom tomatoesTasty tomatoes

An excerpt from Cornell student Jessica Schisano’s reflective journal from HORT 201, The Art of Horticulture

As a child I spent much time in my grandmother’s fruit and vegetable garden in New Paltz, N.Y. The garden was always bursting with color. The blood red tomato, the deep purple eggplant, and the yellow squash made the garden a mosaic of life.

Every summer the garden would overflow with plump, sweet tomatoes in every shape and color. My grandmother grew different varieties of tomatoes such as beefstake, plum, cherry, and grape -- each beautiful in their own way. The grape tomatoes were always my favorite because they were the smallest of the tomatoes. They looked so delicate and fragile as they dangled from their vines. Read more.