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Awesome Starling nice crop! The birds dont bother you?
I get lorikeets, fig parrots and mostly flying foxes hooking into mine. They are having an unprecedented third consecutive crop in 3 months as is the grimal.It is almost a 4th crop as there was a flowering just after the previous flowers set fruit. Mine crop rather like Starlings' one, getting festooned with vast quantities.
If u don't like eating them out of hand, try juicing them.It's what I end up doing when i have too much fruit to eatIt's a real treat.http://tropicalfruitforum.com/index.php?topic=10104
A mate at work would metaphorically murder you for a handful of them. Amazingly, I didn't have any set on my sabara yet, just a bit on the grimal. We haven't had this much rain in spring for, well, ever. So maybe mine just wanted to be a bit drier...
Quote from: FlyingFoxFruits on November 09, 2015, 11:33:19 PMIf u don't like eating them out of hand, try juicing them.It's what I end up doing when i have too much fruit to eatIt's a real treat.http://tropicalfruitforum.com/index.php?topic=10104I actually don't mind the flavor of the skin, or more precisely the flesh closest to this. It's almost a bit mangosteen-ish in a way. The problem is, there's not much of this and I neither like the skin by itself, or the greater bulk of the flesh by itself. If the skin was thinner, and the flavor diffused more through the flesh, I'd be more into them, for sure. And they're very sweet, which isn't my thing as an acid fruit enthusiast ( I deliberately eat passionfruit well before optimum sweetness for example). I think this is why I enjoyed the pitangatuba so much, it's pretty much a sour fruit lover's dream come true, and I can't wait until my few little trees produce. A while off yet though, 2 or three years.One thing I wouldn't mind trying is powdering them. I think this might be the key to getting the balance right for my taste.
Quote from: starling2 on November 10, 2015, 12:14:03 AMQuote from: FlyingFoxFruits on November 09, 2015, 11:33:19 PMIf u don't like eating them out of hand, try juicing them.It's what I end up doing when i have too much fruit to eatIt's a real treat.http://tropicalfruitforum.com/index.php?topic=10104I actually don't mind the flavor of the skin, or more precisely the flesh closest to this. It's almost a bit mangosteen-ish in a way. The problem is, there's not much of this and I neither like the skin by itself, or the greater bulk of the flesh by itself. If the skin was thinner, and the flavor diffused more through the flesh, I'd be more into them, for sure. And they're very sweet, which isn't my thing as an acid fruit enthusiast ( I deliberately eat passionfruit well before optimum sweetness for example). I think this is why I enjoyed the pitangatuba so much, it's pretty much a sour fruit lover's dream come true, and I can't wait until my few little trees produce. A while off yet though, 2 or three years.One thing I wouldn't mind trying is powdering them. I think this might be the key to getting the balance right for my taste.I thought I was the only one that felt a ripe Sabara tasted a bit like Mangosteen. I got some very ripe fruit from Peter, they were just about ready to ferment and my wife and I both felt the pulp tasted a lot like Mangosteen.
"they're very sweet..."is there a potential there to make wine (brandy?) from the juice?
Jaboticaba wine is extremely sweet and dark. I was gifted a few bottles from a client, I couldn't drink it straight but it was very good for making desserts and the like. Quince boiled in spiced jaboticaba wine was pretty good.Rob
If you were shipwrecked on a desert island and only had that jaboticaba for food you would be wolfing them down and loving the taste.... nearly all claims of not liking certain foods are BS and pseudo one upmanship...... Talking generally, not about you.What a nice yielding tree!
Quote from: zands on November 10, 2015, 07:09:39 AMIf you were shipwrecked on a desert island and only had that jaboticaba for food you would be wolfing them down and loving the taste.... nearly all claims of not liking certain foods are BS and pseudo one upmanship...... Talking generally, not about you.What a nice yielding tree!Well, yeah. In that situation I'd probably be snorting them. Starvation is the best sauce.