Super Snow White Tomato is an open-pollinated cherry tomato that produces unusually pale, luminous fruits ranging from cream white to bright yellow, each about the size of a ping-pong ball. This indeterminate variety thrives in zones 2, 11 and reaches maturity in just 70, 79 days from transplant, making it surprisingly quick for a season-long producer. The plants stretch 5, 7 feet tall and reward patient gardeners with juicy, sweet tomatoes that shine in salads and fresh eating.

Photo © True Leaf Market
24
Full Sun
Moderate
2-11
84in H x ?in W
—
High
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The striking pale-to-yellow color alone sets this cherry tomato apart on any vine, but it's the flavor that keeps gardeners coming back: each fruit delivers genuine sweetness and juice despite its delicate appearance. Growing in just 70, 79 days, Super Snow White produces continuously on tall, vigorous indeterminate plants that thrive across an unusually wide hardiness range. Open-pollinated and non-GMO, this variety lets you save seeds year after year and watch it adapt to your garden.
Super Snow White shines in fresh salads, where its pale color creates striking visual contrast against greens and other vegetables. The cherry-sized fruits work beautifully as garnishes or pop-in-your-mouth snacks straight from the vine. Their juiciness and sweetness also make them excellent for light preserving applications where you want the fruit's delicate color and bright flavor to stand out.
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Start seeds indoors 6, 8 weeks before your last spring frost. Sow seeds 1/4 inch deep in seed-starting mix, keep soil moist but not waterlogged, and maintain temperatures around 70, 75°F for germination. Provide bright light once seedlings emerge to prevent legginess.
Transplant seedlings outdoors after your last frost date when soil has warmed to at least 60°F. Harden off seedlings by gradually exposing them to outdoor conditions over 7, 10 days before planting. Space transplants 24 inches apart with 36 inches between rows.
Pick Super Snow White tomatoes when they have fully transitioned from white or pale cream to a bright, clear yellow. Unlike red tomatoes, the color change is your primary ripeness indicator. The fruits should yield gently to pressure when ripe. Harvest regularly throughout the season to encourage continued flowering and production on these indeterminate vines. Cherry tomatoes often keep better on the vine than when picked green, so wait for full color development before harvesting.
As an indeterminate variety, Super Snow White grows continuously and benefits from selective pruning to manage size and improve air circulation. Pinch off suckers (shoots that emerge between the main stem and branches) on younger plants to direct energy into main stems and fruit production. Once plants reach 5, 6 feet tall, you may trim the top growth 4, 6 weeks before your first expected frost to encourage ripening of remaining fruit on the vine.
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