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San Marzano Tomatoes, Whole

San Marzano Product Details

San Marzano Tomatoes, Whole


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$4.60
$4.60
Sales Rank: 3657
San Marzano

Avg. Customer Review: 2.5 Star

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San Marzano Tomatoes, Whole
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Product Review
Product Description

Plum tomatoes named after the region of San Marzano near Naples, Italy have traditionally been the tomatoes of choice for the best flavored tomato sauce.

These are domestically grown tomatoes which use the same variety of seed. They are firm and meaty with very few seeds.

Each can contains 28 ounces of whole peeled tomatoes.

Fat and Cholesterol Free





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Product Details
San Marzano Tomatoes, Whole
  • Publisher: San Marzano
  • Label: San Marzano
  • Studio: San Marzano
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 Star based on 16 reviews
  • Sales Rank in Gourmet: #3657


Customer Reviews
Avg. Customer Review:2.5 Star

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 5 Star
Summary: Best in supermarket varieties 2008-04-12
Comment: I don't know about the issue of their genuineness, but the San Marzano brand of canned tomatoes pictured here is far and away the best variety I've found in grocery stores. They beat the standard Hunts and Progreso brands hands down -- far firmer. Worth the price premium.

But now I'm inspired to mail-order some "real" ones from Italy.


0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 5 Star
Summary: TASTE LIKE GARDEN GROWN...FRESH!!! 2008-03-12
Comment: My husband and I LOVE these San Marzano tomatoes. NO, they are not from Italy...the cans I have actually looked at were grown in Canada from San Marzano seeds. It is NOT "just" a regiuon in Italy, it is also a classification of tomato, like "Roma," or "Big Boy."

They taste fantastic and fresh and un-fooled-around-with. Just like from our garden, when the squirrels actually let us have some of our own tomatoes (rarely). We search these out and will pay extra for them. The taste dances on your tongue. Use them as a sauce, no other ingreditnets necessary.

These are the only canned tomatoes we eat in our house, and I grew up with Hunts (sugary) and Centano (salty) in my Italian-American home.


2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 1 Star
Summary: Not the real thing 2008-01-19
Comment: I was fooled by the San Marzano label and bought 2 cans. Only to later find out San Marzano is a region and the authentic canned San Marzanos say D.O.P. and have the 3 stamps. The real San Marzano tomatoes do not contain citric acid.


2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 1 Star
Summary: Deceptive branding and a terrible product 2008-01-05
Comment: I wish I could give this stuff zero stars. It's bad enough that the label is deceptive and obviously meant to mislead consumers, but the product is also awful. I recently was cooking with a friend and asked her to buy a can of San Marzano tomatoes for a recipe we were going to make. Not knowing better, she bought a can of these and I was stunned by how awful they were: small, round, pale, tasteless, mealy, and packed in a tomato-tinged watery liquid. I repeat what others have written here: buyer beware!


3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:

Customer Rating: 1 Star
Summary: A complete ripoff 2007-08-27
Comment: I can't believe we're so busy we were deceived by this ripoff. Real San Marzano tomatoes are imported. These are not, but are marketed so that you would think so if you did not read the entire label. Shame on them!



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San Marzano Tomatoes, Whole



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