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Old 27-09-2008, 07:13 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening,rec.gardens.edible,rec.gardens
paghat[_2_] paghat[_2_] is offline
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Default Can you identify this fruit/bush for me please?

In article , Jangchub
wrote:

On Fri, 26 Sep 2008 16:44:15 -0700,
(paghat) wrote:

In article
,
wrote:

WOW!!

Talk about a rapid response!

Thanks very much. So I can eat them then, that's good to know. What
colour should they be when fully ripe?


They're yellow when ripe, but the strains sold for gardes are almost
always hollow with just a tiny dollop of bright red pulp and loads of
black seeds. I pop them open and suck the seeds then spit out the seeds
while in the garden. It would take hundreds to have enough of the red pulp
to strain and can. There are species with plenty of pulp inside, but not
the purple passion flower. I like the flavor, but everyone else I've
convinced to try the red pulp didn't think much of it.

However, the yellow rind is a fair substitute for any "green tomatoes"
recipe, or mixed with green tomatoes or squashes or bell peppers, or mixed
into relish. The simplest thins is to slice up the rinds smallish, fry
with onion and green pepper in oil or butter, &amp added to scrambled
eggs. Or fry until partially browned in very hot oil with onion, bell
pepper, and wdhatever else you like, to make a relish that'll keep for
weeks in the frigerator and goes nicely with hotdogs (tofu hotdogs in my
case) or other sorts of sandwiches, even on grilled cheese.

-paghat the ratgirl


Pags, is Riverside Washington anywhere near you or does it have
similar climate?


Riverside is in Okanagan county, clear across a mountain range from me,
into rather dry areas with thin pine forests opening onto arid prairies
(in a rain-shadow caused by the Cascades). Really couldn't be any
different from my damp and deeply green waterbound county of Kitsap. More
like living on the Russian steppes. Good place to grow temperate ground
orchids, which do poorly my side of the mountain but love the prairie
weather patterns.

If property has any native Rhododendron albiflorum they should preserved
in-place, as they almost always die if transplanted. If I lived there I'd
have to completely relearn gardening, though I wouldn't mind the chance of
having a collection of ground orchids.

Might seem an odd place for a Mahayanan lama to have a home but almost
half the county is Asian people, which doesn't mean a lot of people, the
whole county must have only about 3,000 folks in it. And just over the
boarder in Canada is a Buddhist retreat.

-paggers

I want to use your website to make recommendations
for Lama Zopa Rinpoche's home in WA. Lot's of deer. He wants tons of
color. I looked it up on a zone map and it maps it at around zone 5.
I doubt you are that cold, so is this way north or inland or what?
Will the plants lists on your site apply also to Riverside? Any help
appreciated.

Deer, color, perennial, sounds cold!

V
Victoria

"There are known knowns. These are things we
know that we know. There are known unknowns.
That is to say, there are things that we know
we don't know. But there are also unknown unknowns.
There are things we don't know we don't know."

Donald Rumsfeld

http://gotbodhicitta-wangmo.blogspot.com/
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