Vegetable
Tomatillo
Physalis philadelphica · Solanaceae
Also called: Husk tomato, Mexican husk tomato, Tomate verde, Physalis ixocarpa (synonym)
Tomatillo (Physalis philadelphica) is a moderate-water vegetable well suited to Tucson and the low desert. It thrives in full sun.

Tomatillo at a glance
- Water use
- Moderate (established)
- Sun
- Full sun (6-8 hours); appreciates afternoon shade during peak summer heat in Tucson.
- Mature size
- Sprawling, branching plant 3-4 ft tall and 3-4 ft wide; benefits from staking or a cage.
- Growth rate
- Fast and vigorous; about 75-100 days from transplant to first fruit.
- Bloom
- Yellow with dark (purple-brown) center, Yellow, dark-centered flowers spring through fall; fruit harvested when it fills and splits the papery husk.
- Cold hardiness
- Frost sensitive; warm-season annual (tender perennial in frost-free spots). Plant after last frost.
- Soil
- Well-drained, compost-amended soil; tolerates alkaline desert soil. Less fussy than tomatoes.
- Native range
- Native to and domesticated in Mexico/Mesoamerica; widely naturalized. Related wild Physalis (groundcherries) occur in Arizona, but the cultivated tomatillo is not a Sonoran Desert native.
- Best used as
- Edible fruit (salsa verde, sauces), Self-seeding warm-season vegetable, Pollinator-friendly garden plant
- Wildlife
- Flowers attract bees (needs insect pollination and a second plant for good set); foliage can host hornworms and flea beetles like other nightshades.
- Toxicity
- Ripe fruit (husk removed) is edible. Like other nightshades, the leaves, stems, and unripe/green husk-covered immature fruit contain solanine-type alkaloids and should not be eaten by people or pets; keep foliage away from grazing pets.
How to grow Tomatillo in Tucson & the low desert
Watering
WARM SEASON: set out transplants mid-Feb to March (after frost) for a spring/early-summer crop, and again in July-August for a fall crop; it often pauses fruiting in extreme heat and resumes when nights cool. Water deeply and consistently to prevent blossom drop; mulch the root zone.
Fertilizer & nutrients
Moderate feeder. Compost at planting plus a balanced or slightly lower-nitrogen vegetable fertilizer at flowering; too much nitrogen yields lush plants with few fruit.
Pruning & care
Stake or cage the floppy stems; pinch tips to encourage branching. Plant at least two plants for cross-pollination and good fruit set.
Notes
Needs at least two plants because it is largely self-incompatible. Performs well in Tucson's two warm-season windows and often reseeds. Correct current botanical name is Physalis philadelphica; P. ixocarpa is an older synonym still seen on seed packets.
Sources: University of Arizona Cooperative Extension; Pima County Master Gardeners; Tucson Organic Gardeners Planting Guide