Pea Eggplant (Noong Ta Klong Pea)
Solanum torvum
Please note: this listing is for SEEDS, not fresh eggplants!
Pea Eggplants originate in Central America, and have naturalized and become important in tropical Africa, and many other tropical parts of the globe. This variety, for example, comes from our friends at Adaptive Seeds who found it growing semi-wild in Noong Ta Klong, Thailand. Refugees from the Karen state of Myanmar in South Philadelphia (who spent time living in camps in Thailand) asked Truelove Seeds if we could find this variety for them, and we were glad to see that Adaptive Seeds has made this important taste of home available on this continent. Our seeds were grown by Karen farmers in Philadelphia for their own community as well as for our catalog. They eat these small, round, and bitter eggplants when green and unripe in curries and sauces. This species is also known as Turkey Berry and is used in medicine. Known and loved as Susuma in Jamaica!
Days to maturity: 90
Seeds per pack: 40
Germination rate: 95.25% on 03/08/2024
Planting / harvesting notes
These are heat-loving and seeds should be started indoors about 1/8-1/4" deep, about 8 weeks before the last frost. Transplant into garden well after the danger of frost. The growing characteristics are similar to most eggplants. The plants reach about 4-5 feet tall and should be planted 12 inches apart. They need full sun and fertile soil. Staking helps as the plants become heavy. The eggplants begin green, but should be picked when they are about 1-2 inches wide and green. They must be picked regularly to keep production and ensure they don’t over ripen. For seed saving the fruits ripen to orange.
Seed keeping notes
Eggplants are generally self-pollinating, though we isolate different varieties of the same species by 300 feet, in hopes that flying insects will not cross pollinate them unexpectedly. Eggplant seeds are ripe when the fruits get far past their edible stage, and have turned another color, in this case orange. Cut the fruit, scrape out seeds (perhaps through a heavy-duty screen) into a vessel, add a little water (1-2" is probably plenty) to your seeds and pulp to keep them from drying out, and allow them to ferment away from direct sunlight. Alternatively, if you have lots of ripe fruits, stomp them in a bucket! Fermentation is not necessary with eggplants, but it makes seed cleaning a bit easier. Ideally, you will stir the concoction every day for 3-5 days. In the end, add more water to fill the vessel, stir one final time, and allow to settle. Pour off the floating material and then strain the seeds through a strainer. Sometimes, you will need to add more water and pour off the floating material several times until the water is clear and you can see the seeds sunken at the bottom. Squeeze dry the strained seeds in a towel, and then lay out to dry on a labeled screen or paper product in a ventilated place away from direct sunlight for a week or two.