Cool season vegetables that were planted in time are running very early this year. We had snow peas and sugarsnaps in late May, but they are pretty well over. Sugarsnaps seem to have some new blossoms after the recent cool weather, though. Spinach is history except for a few plants we let bolt (they look like miniature French sorrel in bloom). Second planting of arugula is in peak condition.
Warm crops had to be planted late May rather than May 15-20 because of cold, but they seem to be making up for lost time. Heavy fruit set on tomatoes. We picked a Gold Nugget today, which is early. Earlier in the week I picked a corno di toro pepper, which had it's tip in the mulch. This was a real aberration although we have a fair number of sweet banana peppers in the 1 1/2 to 2 inch range. First Orient Express eggplant is a little over an inch long. Load of blossoms on eggplants, peppers and tomatillos. No sign of fruit set on tomatillos although insects have been working the blossoms.
Reference to lush tomato vines in an earlier post concerns me. Too much nitrogen on tomatoes and peppers causes lush growth but little fruiting. The trick on tomatoes is to keep nitogen fairly low until the second group of fruit is about the size of golf balls and then apply a soluble fertilizer relatively high in nitrogen such as fish emulsion or Miracle Gro for tomatoes.
Gold Nugget is a yellow cherry tomato with interesting properties. They produce early but not for a long time and are usually history by the time the beefsteaks are ripe. The plants are small and suitable for containers. The fruit has a high pectin content and high acid for a yellow tomato. When production is high, we usually zap some in the microwave and then let the tomato water drain from a food mill. The tomato water is kept separate from the puree run through the food mill. Frequently, their tomato water will jell in the refrigerator. Both puree and water freeze well. Freeze in ice cube trays and then bag for small quantities to add to sauces.