Raspberry Red Nectarine is a remarkable stone fruit that defies expectation, a nectarine with flesh the color of wine and a flavor that tastes like it was born from the crossing of raspberry and peach. Developed by the California Rare Fruit Growers' Hybridizer Group, this is the result of meticulous breeding work crossing red-fleshed peaches with white nectarines, creating something genuinely rare. The small to medium fruit wears dark burgundy skin and offers freestone flesh streaked in vivid red, visually stunning and tasting even better. Hardy in zones 5, 9 and reaching maturity at 15 feet, it blooms in August and produces fruit with the juicy, melting texture you crave in a nectarine. This is a variety that transforms how you think about stone fruits.
Full Sun
Moderate
5-9
180in H x ?in W
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High
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What sets Raspberry Red Nectarine apart is its complete departure from typical nectarine flavor and appearance. The flesh streaks in shades of red throughout, a genetic gift from its red-fleshed peach ancestry, and the taste is genuinely unique, rich and complex, sweet but balanced by a pleasant tartness that echoes raspberry more than traditional peach. This isn't a novelty; the breeding work behind it was intentional, seeking to capture the flavor of old "Indian Blood" peaches while maintaining the smooth skin and freestone flesh of a nectarine. If you've only grown standard nectarines, this variety will surprise you.
As a freestone nectarine with melting flesh and complex flavor, Raspberry Red Nectarine shines eaten fresh off the tree when fully ripe, the sweetness and tartness balanced just right. The unusual red flesh and rich, raspberry-like notes make it visually and organically suited to desserts, jams, and compotes where you want both visual drama and sophisticated flavor. The freestone pit separates cleanly, making it practical for fresh eating, slicing into fruit salads, or any preparation where you need easy access to the flesh.
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Plant in late winter or early spring when the tree is dormant, in a location with full sun and well-draining soil. Space trees 15–20 feet apart to allow for mature canopy spread. Water thoroughly at planting and keep soil consistently moist through the first growing season to establish a strong root system.
Harvest when the fruit yields slightly to gentle pressure and the skin color deepens to full dark burgundy, the red flesh coloring and raspberry-like aroma intensify as the fruit ripens. Nectarines do not continue to ripen significantly after picking, so wait until they're fully ripe on the tree. Gently twist and lift, supporting the branch with your other hand to avoid breaking, or clip with pruners if needed. Peak harvest typically occurs in late summer.
Nectarines fruit on one-year-old wood, so prune after harvest in late summer, removing any dead, crossing, or inward-growing branches to maintain an open center for good air circulation. Light heading back of vigorous shoots encourages branching and balanced fruit production. Avoid heavy dormant season pruning, which stimulates excessive vegetative growth.
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“Raspberry Red Nectarine emerged from deliberate work by the California Rare Fruit Growers' Hybridizer Group, a breeding program driven by the desire to resurrect the flavor profiles of old heirloom peaches, particularly the legendary "Indian Blood" variety. The breeders crossed red-fleshed peaches with white nectarines, then re-crossed the resulting seedlings, a multi-generational effort to stabilize and concentrate the red flesh and complex flavor while maintaining the smooth, fuzz-free skin that defines nectarines. This was not a chance discovery but intentional varietal development aimed at creating something lost, a bridge between the rich, almost wine-like character of antique peaches and the texture and smoothness gardeners expect from a nectarine.”