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Try keep them pretty warm for a couple of days if you can, I had mine in the greenhouse for a while and they didn't do anything, then a couple of nights on the heat mat and they sprouted away!
Thanks all - that makes me feel better. Mine are in the heated prop, they've been in since last Wed so this is the 9th day. The chillies have beaten them to it!
Not sure on the tomatillo, but i grew goldenberry pineapple outside as an annual and it did fab, so am guessing the tomatillo would too?
I saved the seed from my goldenberry crop last year & *touch wood* I'll have a few more to plant out again this year.
It's my first year growing physalis. In my heated mini growhouse I've got a Cape Gooseberry (James Wong Inca Berry seeds from Suttons) and a Cossack Pinaepple Ground Cherry plant (supposed to have less of an aftertaste than some varieties).
They're both growing very well, but with quite different growth habits:
The Cape Goosberry is the one on the very right on the front row, and the Ground Cherry to the left of it. The leaves on the CG are bigger than my fist already.
Looking at the size of them already they're going to be monsters, so I'll keep them in the 6 litre pots I think, so they stand a chance of fitting inside the growhouse later in the year.
I can't wait to try the fruits, first to come will be the Ground Cherry, I hear they taste good, but that CGs are even better, hope they're worth the wait.
Just to be absolutely clear, these are tomatilloes, not Cape Gooseberries - I understand those things
These tomatilloes are new to me though and I've never ever eaten one so don't know what to expect.
I think Danny and Mark are both talking about ground cherries/cape gooseberries which are Physalis peruviana. They are orange when ripe and sweet tasting and can be used like fruit.
Tomatillos, which are Physalis philadelphica, are a bit different, although the fruit grow in similar looking husks. They are used more like a vegetable, especially as the main ingredient of Mexican salsa.
I've grown the big green tomatillos a couple of times, but haven't eaten them much as I wanted to save seeds. They had quite a sharp taste and could add a nice tang to dishes if combined with other ingredients, but I wouldn't be keen on eating them on their own.
This year I have another variety as well that has more purple coloured fruit when ripe. I ate one raw and it was sweeter than the green ones and quite pleasant, though still not very fruity tasting.
Tomatillos are ready when the fruit fills the husk or splits it open. This can happen at varying sizes. The husk balloons out first to its maximum size, but is empty, and then the tomatillo inside grows to fill it.
They keep for a few weeks at room temperature after harvesting if you leave them in their husks. They do often fall from the plant but you don't have to wait for that to happen.
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