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Saving Tomato Seeds — The Fermentation Method
Save tomato seed the proper way — by fermenting it. Each tomato seed is wrapped in a slippery gel that stops it germinating inside the fruit, so you let the scooped seeds ferment in a jar for a few days to dissolve that coat (and kill seed-borne disease), then rinse, dry and store. A buildable school project in the wet seed and why rotting helps.
ආරම්භක
About a week (a few days fermenting)
උපදෙස්
1
1
The seed in a jacket of jelly
The seed in a jacket of jelly
Cut a tomato open and each seed sits in a slippery gel. That gel is a natural germination inhibitor — it stops the seeds sprouting inside a warm, wet fruit. To save the seed we must remove that jacket, and the cleanest way is to let it ferment, just as a fruit rotting on the ground would.
2
2
Choose a fully ripe fruit
Choose a fully ripe fruit
Pick a dead-ripe (even slightly overripe) tomato from a healthy, true-to-type, OPEN-POLLINATED plant — never an F1 hybrid. Riper fruit means fully finished seed.
Materials for this step:
Tomato Seeds1 packet3
3
Scoop seeds and gel into a jar
Scoop seeds and gel into a jar
Squeeze or scoop the seeds and their jelly into a jar and add a splash of water. Label the jar. Leave it uncovered (or loosely covered) somewhere warm, out of direct sun.
Tools needed:
Borosilicate Beaker4
4
Ferment for 2-4 days
Ferment for 2-4 days
Stir once a day. Over 2-4 days a layer of mould and scum forms on top — this is the fermentation dissolving the gel coat and, as a bonus, killing several seed-borne diseases. Stop at 3-4 days; ferment too long and the good seeds start to sprout or spoil.
5
5
Rinse — keep the sinkers
Rinse — keep the sinkers
Add plenty of water and stir. The good, heavy seeds SINK; the dead seeds and pulp float — pour the floaters off. Tip the sinkers into a fine sieve and rinse under the tap until they are perfectly clean.
Tools needed:
60-Mesh Sieve6
6
Dry flat and store
Dry flat and store
Spread the seeds thinly on a plate or fine screen (NOT paper towel — they glue themselves to it) and dry out of the sun, stirring daily, until they no longer stick together. Store cool, dark and airtight, labelled. Tomato seed lasts 4-6 years.
Materials for this step:
Clean Glass Jars with Lids1 piece
Adhesive Labels1 sheet7
7
Compendium — the wet seed and fruit's clock
Compendium — the wet seed and fruit's clock
Seeds fall into two camps for the saver. DRY seeds (beans, lettuce, carrots) ripen in a pod or head that dries on the plant, so you just wait, thresh and store. WET seeds are born inside a juicy fruit — tomato, cucumber, squash, melon — and the fruit's job is to keep those seeds moist, fed and, crucially, DORMANT until it is eaten or rots away, so they don't sprout in the wet dark of the fruit. The tomato enforces that dormancy with a gel around each seed loaded with germination inhibitors. In nature the fruit drops, rots, and microbes eat away the gel, freeing the clean seed to germinate in spring — fermentation in a jar is simply that rotting, sped up and controlled. It does three useful things at once: it digests the inhibitor gel so the seed will germinate crisply, it destroys a number of bacterial and fungal diseases that ride on the seed coat, and the float-test at the end sorts the living heavy seed from the dead light chaff. The tomato is a self-pollinator like the bean, so its seed comes true with little isolation — but the wet-seed handling is what's new here, and the same ferment-or-wash principle carries over to cucumbers and, with a simpler rinse, to squash and melon. A New World fruit that only reached Europe in the 1500s, the tomato is now the most-saved seed in the home garden — and it all turns on cooperating with the fruit's own clever clock.
ද්රව්ය
3- 1 packetස්ථානගත
- 1 pieceස්ථානගත
- 1 sheetස්ථානගත
අවශ්ය මෙවලම්
2- ස්ථානගත
- ස්ථානගත
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Adhesive Labels, try:
Adhesive Seal Labels - Instead of Tomato Seeds, try:
Sesame Seeds (Raw)
Annatto Seeds
Hemp Seeds
Bean Seeds
Pepper Seeds
Cumin Seeds
Lavender Seeds - Instead of 60-Mesh Sieve, try:
Fine Mesh Sieve (60-80 mesh)
Classifier Sieve
Coarse Sieve (5-10mm mesh)
Vibrating Sieve (2mm mesh)
සම්බන්ධ බ්ලූප්රින්ට්
මෙම බ්ලූප්රින්ට් දැනුම බෙදා ගනී — ශිල්ප ක්රම, ද්රව්ය හෝ මූලධර්ම
Related blueprints
Other builds that share materials, tools, or techniques with this one.

Saving Carrot Seeds — The Two-Year Biennial

Dyeing Blue with a Woad Urine Vat — The Fermentation Method That Coloured Europetextiles

Dyeing Blue with Japanese Indigo — The Fresh-Leaf Salt-Rub Methodtextiles

Saving Bean and Pea Seeds — The Easiest First Seed to Save

Saving Squash Seeds — Hand-Pollination to Keep Them Pure

Saving Maize Seeds — The Wind-Pollinated Outbreeder
CC0 පොදු වසම
මෙම බ්ලූප්රින්ට් CC0 යටතේ නිකුත් කර ඇත. ඔබට අවසර නොමැතිව පිටපත් කිරීම, වෙනස් කිරීම, බෙදා හැරීම සහ භාවිතා කිරීම කළ හැක.
බ්ලූප්රින්ට් හරහා නිෂ්පාදන මිලදී ගැනීමෙන් නිර්මාතෘට සහාය වන්න නිර්මාතෘ කොමිසම විකුණුම්කරුවන් විසින් නියම කළ, හෝ මෙම බ්ලූප්රින්ට්හි නව අනුවාදයක් සාදා ආදායම බෙදා ගැනීමට ඔබේ බ්ලූප්රින්ට්හි සම්බන්ධතාවයක් ලෙස ඇතුළත් කරන්න.