Tomatoes will be bigger and more flavourful if gardeners complete this simple task07:53, 28 May 2026From planting the first seed to picking a ripe, sun-kissed fruit, tomatoes offer an ideal combination of visual beauty and a mouth-watering harvest. Whether enjoyed fresh in salads, cooked down into sauces, or stacked into a satisfying sandwich, their sweet taste makes them an enduring garden staple.‌While many gardeners are happy with a consistent supply of cherry tomatoes, there's something particularly rewarding about cultivating impressive, large fruits. Bigger tomatoes create a stunning focal point for any meal and deliver enhanced sweetness and juiciness. According to greenhouse specialists at Juliana, growing them is straightforward with a quick technique that takes just seconds. They said, "To maximise the size of your tomatoes, consider truss pruning."‌‌Truss pruning involves removing some of the fruit on a truss, which is the cluster where tomatoes grow, to allow the remaining fruit to grow larger."This is especially important on larger, beefsteak tomatoes, where the weight of developing fruit can damage the plants", said the Juliana team.In the UK, tomatoes begin to ripen from mid-summer onwards, though timing varies depending on the variety, weather conditions and fruit size. In a greenhouse, tomatoes generally fruit from June through to October, reports the Express.‌The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) notes that cordon or indeterminate tomatoes, which grow tall and need supports like wooden stakes, benefit from truss pruning. And there's a simple way to determine precisely when to do it.When to truss-prune tomatoesTomatoes cultivated indoors, whether in a kitchen or greenhouse, should be truss-pruned once they've developed seven fruit trusses. For those grown outdoors, contemplate pruning when the plant reaches four trusses.‌Pruning in June, when plants usually begin setting fruit, ensures your plant understands which trusses to focus on well ahead of summer's peak ripening period.How to prune tomatoesAccording to the greenhouse experts, you should target keeping roughly four to six tomatoes per truss on indoor tomato plants.Article continues belowThey said: "Remove the smallest or misshapen fruits, allowing the plant to concentrate its energy on developing fewer, but larger, fruits."Regularly check your plants and prune as needed throughout June."Consider it as helping your tomato plant channel its resources: rather than nurturing eight or 10 smaller fruits, it directs more sugar, water and nutrients towards just four or five, producing bigger, more flavoursome tomatoes.