German Pink Tomato
Heirloom
All-Time Favorite
- Organic
- Pink fruits grow to 1-2 pounds
- Meaty beefsteak fruits have few seeds and little cracking
- Potato leaf plants
- Fruit ripens throughout the season
- 85 days from transplant
- ±12,700 seeds/oz
Item Details
One of the two original Bavarian heirlooms from Diane Ott Whealy’s family that started SSE. Potato leaf plants produce large 1-2 pound beefsteak fruits. Meaty flesh with few seeds, very little cracking or blossom scars. Full sweet flavor. Excellent for canning, freezing, and slicing. Indeterminate, 85 days from transplant. ±12,700 seeds/oz.
Learn to Grow German Pink Tomato
Start Indoors: 6 weeks before last frost
Germination: 7-14 Days
Plant Outdoors: 24-36” Apart
Support: Cage, stake, or trellis
Instructions - Sow seeds indoors ¼" deep. Tomatoes are sensitive to freezing temperatures, so wait to transplant outdoors until the soil is warm. Plant in full sun.
Ratings & Reviews
7 reviews
German Pink Tomato
by mike
one of the best heirloom tomatoes I've ever grown.
WHAT A TOMATO!
by Terry A.
7/26/20 just harvested a beautiful 11/4lb tomato. one of the best tasting with little pulp just meat! will grow more of these beauties next season.
Best of the big boys
by Steinmeier farms
This is a winner. Very large meaty and tasty variety. Produced well in containers.
My new favorite!
by Mike K
By far, one of the most tasty, silky, dense tomato's I've grown here in Oregon. I will definitely grow many more next year! Very impressed!
Super tomato
by Irina
Pink German is the best tasting tomato I ever grown! SSE own favorite variety, I got it this year, I grow all my tomatoes from seeds and have my own varieties. But this is so far best tasting superior tomato! Perfect germination and very strong plants, very happy and highly recommend this tomato to everyone.
great
by Lazy M Farm
by far the best tomato we have ever raised.
Excellent Germination
by Jubilee
This is the best germination tomato that a I have ever had. 100% germination and I can hardly wait to see how they grow in the rain forest of Washington State.