Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners is a citizen science program





'Husk Cherry/Ground Cherry' Tomatillos
 
Sub-Category: None
 
Sub-Category 2:
Description: Open-pollinated. Clustered fruit turning from green to golden-yellow in papery husks.
Days To Maturity: 77
Seed Sources: Totally Tomato - updated in 2011

 
Rating Summary
 
Overall: (3.0 Stars)Overall
Taste: (3.0 Stars)Taste
Yield: (4.5 Stars)Yield
Ease/Reliability: (4.5 Stars)Ease/Reliability
 
Reviews
 
Login to share your Review of Husk Cherry/Ground Cherry.

Number of Reviews: 2

Sort Reviews By:
  [Help]
KEY: O=Overall Rating, T=Taste, Y=Yield, E=Ease

Reviewed on 01/13/2008 by Suz - An experienced gardener

Overall Overall
Taste Taste
Yield Yield
Ease/Reliability Ease

Dutchess, New York, United States
Frost Free Season: 163 - 183 days
Soil Texture: Loam
Garden Size: Large - More than 1,600 square feet (40' x 40')
Sun Exposure: More than 8 hours per day

This plant stays much smaller than the varieties of tomatillo I usually plant (the green variety). It fruited late in the season, and the flavor (raw) to me was just awful. It was kind of like eating a green tomato (crunchy and hard), but there was a bitter/sweet flavor to the fruit that I find unpalatable.
 
0 of 1 gardener found this review helpful.  

Reviewed on 11/09/2004 by Beezoo - An experienced gardener

Overall Overall
Taste Taste
Yield Yield
Ease/Reliability Ease

Tompkins, New York, United States
Frost Free Season: 123 - 143 days
Soil Texture: Clay
Garden Size: Large - More than 1,600 square feet (40' x 40')
Sun Exposure: 6 to 8 hours per day

wild little prolific plant. odd flavor you either love or hate. (I love it) not really a tomatillo except it's the same genus (Physalis) but you wouldn't use them the same way...husk cherries are sweet and fruit-like, not vegetal. very small. ripe when fall from plant. will self-seed freely. stake if poss. to make harvest easier, or it will grow in a tight mound.
 
2 of 2 gardeners found this review helpful.  




Vegetable Varieties for Gardeners is a citizen science program, © 2004-2024, All Rights Reserved
Cornell Garden Based Learning, Cornell University College of Agriculture & Life Sciences, Horticulture Section