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#1
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ID on bottled fruit
Can somebody who is into growing exotic edible fruits please identify
the fruit contained in the bottle illustrated at http://www.box.net/public/static/490zvq1gf6.jpg It tastes almost exactly like the European gooseberry Ribes uva-crispa, but clearly is not. The fruit is the size of an olive and, as the photo shows, seems to have had a stone removed. It is a product of China. |
#2
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ID on bottled fruit
Richard Wright wrote: Can somebody who is into growing exotic edible fruits please identify the fruit contained in the bottle illustrated at http://www.box.net/public/static/490zvq1gf6.jpg I can't see the fruit too clearly to tell. It tastes almost exactly like the European gooseberry Ribes uva-crispa, but clearly is not. The fruit is the size of an olive and, as the photo shows, seems to have had a stone removed. It is a product of China. Maybe someone who reads Chinese can |
#3
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ID on bottled fruit
The fruit is called "san ja" in Chinese. It has a sour taste. It
suppose to help digestion. |
#4
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ID on bottled fruit
On 31 Mar 2006 13:12:02 -0800, "
wrote: The fruit is called "san ja" in Chinese. It has a sour taste. It suppose to help digestion. Thanks for that. Do by any chance know the scientific name? |
#5
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ID on bottled fruit
http://www.viable-herbal.com/singles/herbs/s350.htm
The berries' name is: hawthorn berries. Read about on the above link. |
#6
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ID on bottled fruit
On 31 Mar 2006 18:58:22 -0800, "
wrote: http://www.viable-herbal.com/singles/herbs/s350.htm The berries' name is: hawthorn berries. Read about on the above link. These are not hawthorn berries, which are tiny in comparison. The fruit in the bottle I illustrated is the size of an olive or an acorn. Other posters suggested lychee and longan, but the fruit in question is neither or these. I know what lychees and longans look and taste like. In particular lychees and longan have non-fibrous fruit. The fruit in the bottle is a bit 'gritty' like a pear. Somebody also suggested loquat. The loquats I know are yellow or yellow-orange, whereas the fruit in the bottle are represented as scarlet. And again, the flavour and texture are wrong. What I found most striking is that the flavour is indistinguishable from the European gooseberry. |
#7
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ID on bottled fruit
Richard Wright wrote:
Can somebody who is into growing exotic edible fruits please identify the fruit contained in the bottle illustrated at http://www.box.net/public/static/490zvq1gf6.jpg It tastes almost exactly like the European gooseberry Ribes uva-crispa, but clearly is not. Check out the litchi fruits - litchi and rambutani. Although rambutani has far spinier (hairier? One or the other) skin than that shown on the bottle... Henriette -- Henriette Kress, AHG Helsinki, Finland Henriette's herbal homepage: http://www.henriettesherbal.com |
#8
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ID on bottled fruit
In article ,
Richard Wright wrote: Can somebody who is into growing exotic edible fruits please identify the fruit contained in the bottle illustrated at http://www.box.net/public/static/490zvq1gf6.jpg It tastes almost exactly like the European gooseberry Ribes uva-crispa, but clearly is not. The fruit is the size of an olive and, as the photo shows, seems to have had a stone removed. It is a product of China. Most likely this fruit: http://www.lycheesonline.com/ Lychee. Cheers! -- Peace, Om. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a son-of-a-bitch." -Jack Nicholson |
#9
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ID on bottled fruit
It looks like a Longan. The ones i've seen and eaten were white. Very
tasty. Dwayne "Richard Wright" wrote in message ... Can somebody who is into growing exotic edible fruits please identify the fruit contained in the bottle illustrated at http://www.box.net/public/static/490zvq1gf6.jpg It tastes almost exactly like the European gooseberry Ribes uva-crispa, but clearly is not. The fruit is the size of an olive and, as the photo shows, seems to have had a stone removed. It is a product of China. |
#10
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ID on bottled fruit
Richard Wright said:
Can somebody who is into growing exotic edible fruits please identify the fruit contained in the bottle illustrated at http://www.box.net/public/static/490zvq1gf6.jpg It tastes almost exactly like the European gooseberry Ribes uva-crispa, but clearly is not. The fruit is the size of an olive and, as the photo shows, seems to have had a stone removed. Chinese haw is about 1 inch in diameter. Big enough? http://www.pfaf.org/database/plants....natifida+major Mume (a type of apricot/plum) is probably too big. If you *do* find out what the fruit is, please post. I hate unsolved mysteries. -- Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast) Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced. (attributed to Don Marti) |
#11
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ID on bottled fruit
There is no mystery Pat. it is clearly lychee.
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#12
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ID on bottled fruit
On 3 Apr 2006 15:22:12 -0700, "simy1" wrote:
There is no mystery Pat. it is clearly lychee. I don't think you have been reading the thread. If you have, why do you disbelieve the person who translated the Chinese characters on the jar? It is clearly Chinese hawthorn fruit. |
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