

A big menu of pizza, pastas & sandwiches, plus kids’ fare, served in an upbeat faux-rustic room.
Hours
| Sunday | 11 AM–9 PM |
| Monday | 11 AM–9 PM |
| Tuesday | 11 AM–9 PM |
| Wednesday | 11 AM–9 PM |
| Thursday | 11 AM–9 PM |
| Friday | 11 AM–10 PM |
| Saturday | 11 AM–10 PM |
Address and Contact Information
Address: 275 S Main St, Colchester, CT 06415
Phone: (860) 537-3996
Website: http://www.theplumtomato.com/
Menu Photos
Order and Reservations
Order: Order online
Photo Gallery
Related Web Results
Colchester Menu – The Plum Tomato
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The Plum Tomato Colchester CT – Order Online
Reviews
I am honestly in shock at how horrible this experience was. Our party of 4 stopped in for what we hoped would be a nice dinner before a scheduled drive through the Christmas lights; instead, we left hungry, frustrated, and appalled.
The issues started immediately. We stood by the “please wait here to be seated” sign only to have someone yell at us from across the restaurant to just sit wherever we wanted. Despite the restaurant being more than half empty, the service was nonexistent. After taking our initial drink and food orders, our waitress completely vanished.
After 30 minutes of sitting with empty glasses, we had to flag down a different waiter just to get soda refills. After 50 minutes of waiting with no food, we finally asked to cancel our check because we had a schedule to keep. The waiter claimed they were “busy” with a nearly two-hour backup for takeout, which was a blatant lie—we were there for nearly an hour and did not see a single person come in for a pickup. There were at least four people in the kitchen, another 2 serving and only a handful of tables occupied; there was no excuse for that kind of delay.
When the food finally arrived, it was insulting.
The Meatballs: Served steaming hot on the outside but piping cold and pink/raw in the middle. It was clear they were tossed in a microwave and not actually cooked through. (The pink is hard to see in the pictures but you can clearly tell by comparison which one is cooked and which is noy)
The Calzones: These were a joke. It was a massive pile of dough filled with cold, skim-milk ricotta and a tiny sprinkle of mozzarella that hadn’t even begun to melt—it was still in its shredded form. My pepperoni calzone contained exactly three slices of pepperoni.
When we finally got our waitress to return to the table to show her the undercooked, inedible food, she offered no excuses or apologies. She acted like it was a chore to deal with us. We refused to pay for such a pathetic attempt at a meal and had to run to the McDonald’s next door just to ensure we actually ate something cooked before our event.
The inability of a pizza restaurant to make a simple, cooked calzone is pathetic. We will never be back, and we will be sure to warn everyone we know to avoid The Plum Tomato.