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The best tomato I've ever grown was an orange, not Kellog Breakfast (which is a very good variety) but Earl of something, I can't remember, a nice big smooth spherical fruit that managed somehow to be both juicy and not leaky and extremely flavorful, an heirloom of about 1750. It was one of Caroline Male's favorites, too. Roma is OK if you need bulk for sauce, but it's no Stupice- which is not a rare breed, and would be as appropriate for commerce as Roma except that large scale commercial production is as driven by habit as it is by profit.
There's a lot of heirloom varieties which are not innately superior on all axes (excluding commercial value), in my experience- some pink brandywines, for example, which are highly flavorful but need a great deal more catering to their precise needs to produce more than one or two fruits per plant than I had time for even when I was younger and healthier. And old commercial cultivars like Blue Lake pole beans were the standard for the industry for so long because they did, in fact, taste better and were more productive than their predecessors, but have been replaced by machine-harvestable varieties with little or no flavor, and the commercial seed lines have not been rogued sufficiently to maintain the perfect characteristics. One can grow heirloom haricot vert but to my taste they lack the pronounced umami that marked a proper Blue Lake and go to seed too fast for a canning/freezing garden variety.