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Ted's Pink Currant Tomato

Solanum lycopersicum

Price: $3.95

SKU: 3390081

Ted's Pink Currantย 
Solanum pimpinellifolium

76 days, indeterminate โ€” Although red-colored currant tomatoes have been available for many years, pink-fruited currants are fairly rare. 'Ted's Pink Currant' currant abundantly supplies fruit that are about one-half inch in diameter, sweet and mild, that are a beautiful pink color.

In general, currant tomatoes are very productive, very hardy, start producing early and continue until freezing temperatures arrive in the fall. They have a sprawling growth habit that is not easily tamed by tomato baskets nor by using the Florida weave method. Either leave them to their wild, rambling habit, or allow them to climb a lattice of livestock panel.

We received 'Ted's Pink Currant' from our friend, the late Dr. Carolyn Male. She originally had received seeds from Ted Darnowski of Florida and introduced it to seed savers in 2013. Each packet contains approximately 20 seeds.

Note: Although these are a different species from garden tomatoes, they will readily cross with other tomatoes. If you are saving seed, isolate these plants.
Tomato Uses: Small Fruits / Salads
Fruit Color: Pink
Fruit Color: Purple
Harvest Timing: Main Crop / Mid-Season

Customer Reviews:

Do you have experience with this one? ๐Ÿ“ ๐Ÿ“ฃ Write a review!
โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… Will grown again!
By Katie Kes-Pick on September 19, 2021

These turned out so great. All of our other tomatoes didn't perform great this year but Ted showed up! They are very flavorful and my kids love them. My kids picked them out because they were called Ted and the neighbor's dogs name is Ted. So thank you Ted! My only complaint is that they are a bit fragile, when pulling them off the vine it is easy to squish them, but we just eat them off the vine so it isn't a big deal.

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… Interesting Small Fruited Tomato!
By Jack Skelley on June 21, 2018

I grew these last year and saved the seed for future years. Very sweet and continued to grow until frost. The two plants produced an unbelievable quantity of fruit. So many that I had enough for salads, snacks and give to neighbors. The neighbors also had their fill! I had so many that I had enough to make sauce from them as well. The sauce was fabulous! Simply placed them in a blender and reduced the mix to sauce consistency.

As stated in other reviews, the plants grow out of control. I gave up trying to manage them and just let them go. I am guessing that at the end of the season the plants, if allowed to grow vertically, would be 8 to 9 feet tall. I grow all of my tomatoes in five gallon buckets elevated off the ground in a rack. Currently (21 Jun 2018) in the area where this cultivar was grown there are literally dozens (if not hundreds) of plants in the ground. I think this is the first time ever this has happened!

The only drawback to this cultivar is that if the fruit is allowed to ripen completely on the plant it is nearly impossible to pick them without squishing them. I'm guessing this is the reason for the tremendous number of volunteers on the ground this year. The remedy was to pick them when they first blushed and allow then to ripen in the house.

Overall, I would recommend this cultivar as a small fruited type.

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… These are awesome ... Very tasty, and not too acidic.
By Marshall Gibson on February 25, 2018

I highly recommend these little guys. They are very tasty, and not too acidic. I grew two of these plants and quickly got overwhelmed with tiny pink balls of goodness. These plants are wild, and take a lot of management to keep them from going too crazy. I felt like i might need to go at it with the machete a few times, but I resisted that urge. With my two plants I could easily pick a couple quarts every few days, and finally got to the point where I just couldn't pick em all. I took a lot of them to work. While I plan to try new tomatoes every year, these will get another go!

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… Is it possible to have too much of a good thing?
By Kale Clauson on January 29, 2018

I ended up keeping two plants for myself and giving the extra starts to friends. After attempting to contain them, I gave in and let them go wild along a wire fence. Even after pruning aggressively they grew into a thicket nearly 5' tall... ABSOLUTELY COVERED IN DELICIOUS PINK 1/2 TOMATOES.

It's hard to impress upon you the quantity of tomatoes that I got from these. I only fertilized once with a side-dressing of crab meal when they were about two feet tall and eventually watering became impossible without a machete.

They flowered and produced fruit until almost the first frost but the flavor wasn't as sweet anymore.

Harvesting the fruit with their vines works well. Don't even bother trying to pick them off individually. The teeny seeds kinda messes with trying to make sauce with the extra tomatoes. Not sure what to do to preserve them ... I'm going to put them in a more 'out of the way' spot this year.

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… Love these!
By Amber Schooley on July 19, 2015

I love these fruit! I direct seeded these outside in the spring, and they grew perfectly. We got the first ripe fruit about two weeks ago. They are so sweet, and practically explode in your mouth. Plus, they are so prolific! I only planted two plants, but in the last two days I got nearly a pint of tomatoes. I use them in salad or stir fries, or just eat them as a snack.