Midnight Roma builds on Oregon State’s purple tomato legacy

CORVALLIS, Ore. — ‘Midnight Roma,’ a tomato developed by Oregon State University and released in 2021, follows in the footsteps of ‘Indigo Rose’ — the first antioxidant-rich purple tomato available on the market.

‘Indigo Rose’ was bred by Jim Myers, the Baggett-Frazier Endowed Chair of Vegetable Breeding and Genetics at Oregon State University. A now-retired professor in the College of Agricultural Sciences, Myers focused his career on improving vegetables for flavor, nutrition and disease resistance using traditional breeding techniques.

‘Midnight Roma’ is a result of crossing ‘Oregon Star’ — a large, fleshy tomato prized for slicing or making paste — with ‘Indigo Rose,’ a dark purple tomato that contains anthocyanins, the same healthy antioxidants found in blueberries.

All three cultivars were developed at Oregon State.

“We were selecting for a really dark Indigo-type processing tomato,” Myers said in 2021. “Ultimately, we got a really nice one. Anybody into home canning would be interested. Chefs like it for making sauces. Right now, Serious Pie in Seattle is using ‘Midnight Roma’ to make pizza sauce.”

Row 7 Seed Co., based in Tarrytown, New York, holds the exclusive rights to ‘Midnight Roma’ and is selling seed online.

Developing Midnight Roma

In developing ‘Midnight Roma,’ Myers concentrated on flavor and disease resistance, creating a better-tasting paste tomato that also resists verticillium wilt. The plant is a semi-determinate cultivar, meaning the tomatoes ripen around the same time — ideal for preserving.

To retain anthocyanins, it is important to include the skin during processing. Myers recommends blending the sauce and pressing it through a sieve.

Ripeness and antioxidant development

‘Indigo Rose’ attracted attention when it was released in 2011. At the time, awareness of antioxidant health benefits was growing, and the introduction of a purple tomato was novel. However, many home gardeners were not sure when to harvest it and often picked it too early.

‘Indigo Rose’ — and now ‘Midnight Roma’ — ripen when:

  • Skin shifts from shiny blue-purple to dull purple-brown
  • Bottom turns from green to red

Sunlight exposure is essential for developing the dark purple skin, which holds the anthocyanins. To achieve the highest levels of antioxidants, Myers advises trellising and pruning to increase sunlight to the fruit.

Myers’ broader breeding impact

In addition to the Indigo series, Myers’ tomato breeding program has released multiple vegetable cultivars, including a green bean cultivar used on 80% of the acreage in Oregon. His work also includes participatory plant breeding, which involves farmers and chefs in evaluating and selecting new cultivars so that crop traits match real-world needs.

Myers also led the Northern Organic Vegetable Improvement Collaborative (NOVIC), a nationwide project focused on breeding vegetable cultivars tailored for organic farming systems.

Other purple tomato cultivars

Between the releases of ‘Indigo Rose’ and ‘Midnight Roma,’ Myers introduced several other purple tomato cultivars:

  • ‘Indigo Cherry Drops’
  • ‘Indigo Pear Drops’
  • ‘Indigo Kiwi’

Breeding these tomatoes involves transferring pollen by hand. With each generation, the most promising plants are selected and crossed again until the desired traits are achieved.

One of the parents of ‘Indigo Rose’ was an experimental tomato with wild genes discovered by Carl Jones, then a graduate student at Oregon State. While examining specimens in a U.S. Department of Agriculture National Plant Germplasm System collection at the University of California, Davis, Jones found a tomato with anthocyanin-rich skin.

“While other fruits, such as blueberries, have higher concentrations of anthocyanins, tomatoes are consumed practically daily in the United States,” Myers said. “The tomato is the nation’s most popular vegetable — unless you count potatoes.”

Previously titled OSU-developed Midnight Roma tomato combines antioxidants and rich flavor

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