Tag Archives: Homegrown tomatoes

Summer Finale at the Saturday Farmer’s Market

September 12, 2025

This past Saturday, September 6th, marked the end of season schedule for St. Michael’s Farmer’s Market. Like many of our readers, I’ve been attending the Saturday market for years! Getting to meet so many of the vendors and following them each week has always been a delightful experience for me. 

People like The Baugh Family (now with two young children) drive in early from Wylie to bring an amazing assortment of east Texas vegetables, blueberries, blackberries and more. But it’s always those juicy, ripe peaches that create the long lines of anxious customers with everyone hoping there will be enough once it’s their turn. Wayne and his wife get up around 2:30am to harvest their magnificent bouquets of freshly cut flowers. Driving in to Dallas from Henderson is about 2 hours but these long-time flower farmers have us drooling over the rainbow of colorful blossoms that are bundled up and ready for purchase.

Master Gardener, Janet Smith class of 2008, became a regular this summer with her west Texas pecans. What a special treat! And new to the market was Honey Apple Farm in Canton, Texas. This small, family owned and operated farm produces a variety of artisan honeys. They are also passionate about strengthening the bee population by providing tips on planting a bee garden and going chemical free.

My end of season trip to the market on September 6th was bittersweet. While some of the vendors will return for a one-time only October appearance, we’ll have to wait until May 2026 for the weekly schedule to resume. Until then, I’m thankful for the bountiful blessings given to us by the farmers, flower growers, beekeepers and more whose hard work provided us with fresh, flavorful food this summer. I’ll be first in line to welcome them back next May.

Looking back through one of my herb cookbooks, I landed on a recipe that had been “tabbed” many years ago but never prepared. Things were about to change. Jerry Traunfeld wrote “The Herbal Kitchen” in 2005 as a handbook for incorporating fresh herbs, from his own herb garden, into everyday home meals. I would be using fresh tomatoes from the Saturday market to prepare his recipe for Tomato Bread. From my own garden, freshly picked basil and thyme along with cured garlic from late spring would supply most of the ingredients. 

Let me go on record as declaring that this new recipe exceeded my expectations.  And for those of you who already have your autumn tomato crop in the ground, please give this incredibly delicious dish a try. You might want to serve it as an accompaniment to salad, soup or with any grilled meats. I’ve made the recipe three times in the last month and shared it with family and friends. Everyone agreed that this is an exceptional way to enjoy fresh juicy tomatoes!

Start with chewy cubes of Italian-style bread drizzled with olive oil then topped with minced garlic and “torn” basil leaves. Finish with juicy, sliced tomatoes and a generous sprinkling of fresh thyme.

Tomato Bread Recipe here !

Linda Alexander, Dallas County Master Gardener Class of 2008


Are Tomatoes The Jerkiest/ Most Obnoxious Plant There Is?

June 12, 2022

 I have given up thinking about tomatoes in terms of their life cycle. Instead I look at it this way;  each stage is an ongoing disaster until we shut down the whole operation in July because they will no longer set fruit. 

The life of a tomato is a progression through fungal disease, wilt, blight, and infestations of mites and hornworms.  We anticipate these events and do our best to prevent them but around June you can easily find yourself, as I did, staring at hornworms the size of my index finger.  Owing to their coloring, hornworms are perfectly camouflaged until they have defoliated their habitat, i.e. our tomato plants. (We sentenced the hornworms to community service at our host organization’s preschool so the children could observe their transformation into sphinx moths.)

Don’t forget that while you are dealing with disease and pests, you must also be aware of your tomato’s changing fertilizer and watering needs.  Decrease the nitrogen when they start to bloom. Keep your tomatoes watered consistently and while doing so consult your crystal ball for the next unexpected rain that will cause them to split. 

Are tomatoes the jerkiest plant – making us work much harder than any plant should expect? Or, are they good for us in the sense that taking care of something other than ourselves is good therapy? 


The tomatoes harvested so far this year have redeemed themselves by joining the peppers in family packs donated to North Dallas Shared Ministries.

Beverly Allen, Dallas County Master Gardener Class of 2018