Welcome back! Last week I began the process of saving tomato seeds (described in the "Saving Tomato Seeds, part 1" blog post). I left the seeds to ferment for about 3 days, and they developed a nice scummy surface indicating that they were ready.
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Tomato seeds after 3 days of fermentation. |
At this point, the seeds should have a somewhat stinky, fermented smell, but nothing too gross. The seeds were at the bottom, and the liquid on top, so I was able to carefully decant the liquid off. I then tapped the seeds into a strainer and rinsed them under fresh water. I use this handy little strainer that I bought years ago in Chinatown. I don't know what its original purpose was, but it's perfect for this. A tea strainer would work equally well.
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Clean tomato seeds in a strainer. |
Next I tapped the seeds out onto a piece of wax paper and labeled the paper with the variety of tomato.
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Tomato seeds on wax paper ready to be dried. |
I left the seeds to dry for about 3-4 days away from the light. Then I carefully peeled them up off the wax paper and put them in envelopes to store until spring. See you next year, tomatoes!
2 comments:
I follow your process, but dry them on coffee filters. The fiber soaks up the water, but the seeds don't stick to the filter.
Excellent idea! Thanks for sharing.
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