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Big Beef Tomato Starts

Big Beef Tomato Starts

Some tomatoes win you over with novelty. Big Beef wins you over by being exactly what a tomato should be โ€” big, red, reliable, and better than you expected every single time.

๐Ÿ† 1994 All-America Selections Winner

Type: Indeterminate ยท Hybrid (F1)
Sun: Full sun โ€” 6โ€“8 hours minimum
Spacing: 24โ€“36" apart
Support: Heavy cage or tall stake โ€” fruit reaches 10โ€“12 oz, plants are vigorous

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๐ŸŒฑ Origin & Story

Big Beef was bred by Colen Wyatt at Seminis Vegetable Seeds (now part of Bayer) and released in the early 1990s. It won the All-America Selections award in 1994 โ€” a distinction earned through blind trials across North America, judged on real-world garden performance, flavor, and yield.

What made Big Beef remarkable then, and what keeps it one of the most widely grown tomatoes in America three decades later, is that it solved a problem most gardeners had given up on: how to get heirloom-quality flavor with hybrid-level reliability. Before Big Beef, the conventional wisdom was that you either grew flavorful heirlooms and accepted the disease losses, or you grew bulletproof hybrids and accepted mediocre taste.

Big Beef refused that trade-off. The disease resistance package โ€” VFFNAStT โ€” is one of the most comprehensive available in a beefsteak. The flavor consistently surprises people who assume hybrids can't taste this good. That combination is why Big Beef has outlasted dozens of competitors and remains a staple in seed catalogs more than 30 years after its release.

๐Ÿด Flavor & Fruit

Classic beefsteak, 10โ€“12 oz, deep red, smooth, and globe-shaped. The kind of tomato that looks like the picture on a seed packet โ€” because it literally was, for years. Thick walls, good juice, firm enough to slice clean but tender enough to eat with pleasure.

The flavor is rich and well-balanced โ€” sweet and acidic in the right proportions, with a full, round tomato taste that doesn't lean too far in any direction. It won't shock you the way Cherokee Purple does. What it will do is deliver, every single time, on every single plant, all season long.

This is the tomato you grow when you want to fill a kitchen counter with perfect, reliable, genuinely good fruit.

๐ŸŒฟ From Our Garden

Big Beef is on our list because our customers asked for it โ€” and because once we grew it ourselves, we understood why. It's the variety we recommend to anyone who says "I just want a really good tomato that actually works." No caveats, no asterisks, no "but watch out for..." โ€” just tomatoes.

๐Ÿ“… Your Oklahoma Season

Plant after mid-April, or May 1 for extra caution. Tulsa's average last frost is early April. Expect first flowers in late May, first ripe fruit in mid-July. Strong, consistent harvests through August and September, continuing until first frost in early November.

Blossom drop begins when daytime temperatures reach 85โ€“90ยฐF and nighttime stays above 72ยฐF, becoming severe above 100ยฐF. Big Beef's hybrid vigor and strong root system help it recover from heat stress faster than most. The fall rebound is reliable and productive.

๐Ÿ’ง Care for Optimal Health

Water deeply twice a week at the base, never overhead. Mulch 2โ€“3 inches to keep moisture consistent and soil temperatures stable. Big Beef is more forgiving than many large-fruited varieties, but erratic watering still causes cracking and blossom end rot.

Feed balanced through the vegetative stage, then shift to phosphorus/potassium-forward once flowers appear.
DIY mix: 2 tbsp fish emulsion + ยฝ tsp kelp per gallon, every 2โ€“3 weeks.

Calcium at planting โ€” crushed eggshells or gypsum โ€” protects those 10โ€“12 oz fruits from blossom end rot. Worth doing every time.

โ˜€๏ธ Oklahoma Heat

Big Beef handles Tulsa heat well โ€” better than most beefsteaks. The robust foliage provides solid self-shading, and the disease resistance package means the plant holds its leaves longer into summer, which protects developing fruit from sunscald.

During peak heat weeks, deep morning watering is your most effective tool. Shade cloth (30โ€“40%) in the afternoon helps but isn't as critical here as with thinner-skinned heirlooms.

๐Ÿ›ก๏ธ What to Watch For

Big Beef's disease resistance (VFFNAStT) covers most of the major threats in Oklahoma gardens. That said, it's not invincible.

Stay ahead of these:
โ€ข Late blight โ€” the one Big Beef doesn't have built-in resistance to. Watch for dark, water-soaked lesions on leaves and stems during cool, wet periods. Remove affected tissue immediately. Copper fungicide preventively after wet stretches โ€” follow your product label for exact rates.
โ€ข Hornworms โ€” check leaf undersides weekly. Hand-pick or apply Bt (1 tsp/gallon, evening spray).
โ€ข Aphids โ€” 2 tbsp neem oil + 2 tsp dish soap per gallon.
โ€ข Blossom end rot โ€” calcium and consistent watering. Not a disease โ€” a calcium uptake issue triggered by moisture swings.
โ€ข Cracking โ€” common on large fruit after rain following dry spells. Consistent watering and mulch are your best prevention.

๐Ÿฝ๏ธ In the Kitchen

Fresh: Thick slices on a BLT. This is arguably the best BLT tomato in existence โ€” firm enough to hold up, flavorful enough to matter, big enough to cover the bread edge to edge.

Sliced: With salt and nothing else. Big Beef doesn't need a recipe. It needs a knife and a plate.

Cooked: Makes a well-balanced, all-purpose tomato sauce. Not as deep as a paste type, not as smoky as Cherokee Purple โ€” just solid, dependable, good tomato flavor in everything you make.

Grilled: Halve, brush with oil, grill cut-side down for 3โ€“4 minutes. The thick walls hold up to heat without falling apart.

๐Ÿชด Why Our Starts?

Six weeks of professional growing before they reach you โ€” proper lighting, careful watering, hardening off. Big Beef's hybrid vigor means it grows fast from the start, and our transplants are timed to be stocky and well-rooted, not leggy and stretched. That strong foundation translates directly into earlier, heavier harvests for you.

$5.00/each
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