View allAll Photos Tagged Granatapfel
Part of: "an apple a day keeps the doctor away - An ENSO (circle, Kreis) a day .... " Aktion Kreis Tagebuch A circle diary - Start of the Project: 1. September // Empty Padded Time at Work // The World as Atelier - Die Welt als Werkstatt
DMC-G2 - P1850096 - 2014-09-18
2 paintings: private collection E. H. u. J. H.
Arvo Paert: "Perpetuum Mobile"
Part of: "res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme" / UNANSWERED REQUEST FOR A PAINTING - Kimono / aquarius - fest, Eis und Schnee
Triptychon AR15_5_30_8_2013
Duesseldorf, Carlsplatz Marketsquare Impressions -------
Der Carlsplatz, lange Zeit Karlplatz, ist der älteste noch betriebene Marktplatz in Düsseldorf. Er liegt südlich der Altstadt, in der Carlstadt, benannt nach Kurfürst Carl Theodor. Der Carlsplatz ist der wichtigste Marktplatz der Stadt, an dem an sechs Wochentagen, außer an Feiertagen, Markt abgehalten wird. 60 Markthändler[1]Stand 2014 bieten vor allem Lebensmittel, Obst und Gemüse, Eier, Fleisch, Fisch, Geflügel und Backwaren sowie die traditionellen Reibekuchen mit Apfelmus und fertigen Backfisch an. In den letzten Jahren haben sich verstärkt gastronomische Stände angesiedelt, die den herkömmlichen Markthandel an einigen Stellen abgelöst haben.
Mit der Erhebung zur Stadt im Jahre 1288 erhielt Düsseldorf Stadt- und Marktrechte.
Im Jahr 1808, setzte sich der Carlsplatz als Standort für die vier einwöchigen Jahrmärkte Düsseldorfs gegen den Markt der Altstadt durch. 1821 wurde der St. Nicola-Jahrmarkt ebenfalls auf den Carlsplatz verlegt.
Ab 1910 war der Karlplatz, nun mit K und ohne s geschrieben, endgültig als Wochenmarkt etabliert. Ab 1940 wurde er allerdings auf den Schwanenmarkt verlegt, da unter dem Karlplatz ein Luftschutzbunker errichtet wurde. Nach dem Krieg kehrte ab Mai 1951 der Markt auf den Karlplatz zurück.[11] Das Parkhaus am Rande des Platzes wurde 1970 erbaut.
Der Carlsplatz veränderte seine Schreibweise im Laufe der Zeit. Insbesondere büßte er im 20. Jahrhundert das Fugen-s ein. Die Bevölkerung akzeptierte dies jedoch nie und nannte den Platz stets Karlsplatz. Über Jahrzehnte hinweg weigerte sich die Stadt, die Sprechweise der Bevölkerung zu übernehmen. Inzwischen ist das S allerdings auf Initiative der Bürgergesellschaft Alde Düsseldorfer zurückgekehrt, auch die Schreibweise mit C zu Beginn wurde wieder eingeführt.
Mehr Informationen:
The Pomegranates on sale at streets of Karachi.....!!
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©Sekitar --- All rights reserved. Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.
English Wikipedia; "Hermann Nitsch"
Hermann Nitsch über die Malhemden:
"Meine große Verehrung für Stefan George und Klimt und meine Überzeugung, dass Kunstausübung der Tätigkeit eines Priesters gleichzusetzen ist".
"Freut euch, frohlockt und jubelt, weil die Zeit erfüllt ist, dass ich mein Gewand anziehe, das mir von Anfang an bereitet ist. Ich werde mein weißes Gewand beflecken mit nassfeuchten, purpurtraubigen Blutstropfen. Ölige Fette, fruchtfleischrote Blutstropfen und blutstinkende, feuchte Schweißflecken tränken das Garn des Kleides, Schweiß- und urinnaß vom Blut durchschwitzt ist mein Winzerkleid."
"Ich beschütte, bepritze, besudle die Fläche mit Blut und wälze mich in den Farblachen."
Part of: "res noscenda" / Unanswered Request for a Painting - Variable, ein Blindtext
Variable, von lateinisch variabilis (veränderbar):
In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter.
In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen.
Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
DMC-G2 - P1680586 - 2013-09-16
...
Hans: die Nägel!!! Gibt`s einen Anlaß?
Ich: Weils zum Mantel paßt.
H: Der ist schön! Neu?
I: Nein, und auch nicht mit Fewa Wolle gewaschen.
H: Sehr schön. Kein Krapfen?
I: Nein, die 40 Tage sind vorbei.
H: Es ist aber nicht Weihnachten.
I: Hä?
H: die Mandarine.
I: Mandarinen sind Krampus.
H: Ja. Erdbeeren, jetzt gelüstet es nach Erdbeeren.
I: Ja, aber bei uns gibts ja noch keine, die werden von irgendwo weitweg angekarrt.
Wie die Mandarinen
H: die Farben schauen schön aus zusammen - das Schwarz, das Orange und die Nägel. ...
...
Snapshot notes from work in telegraphese - Shared Working Room, Shared Working Table.
Selbstportrait AbesseAdesse: 3 Mandarinen, Arizona Pomegranate Green Tea Flasche Wasser, Souffleusenschlüssel, Pastellstift Ivory black, schachtel
Part of ""res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme rückschau vorschau"" // Alltag - shared working table, shared working room // Aquarius // Ego Selfportrait AbsentPresent // "Empty Padded ~ LeerGefüllt - Time at Work" - Prompter`s book ~ Soufflierbuch "Woyzeck" (Georg Büchner, Bob Wilson, Tom Waits). Drawing Page 16
Triptych:
DMC-G2 - P1780508
DMC-G2 - P1780511
DMC-G2 - P1780514 - 2014-03-17
"und unter dem Jammer der Mutter krochen sie wehevoll aus einem Kerker ohnegleichen"
"and under the wailing of the mother they crept painfully out of a dungeon beyond compare"
[Jakob Wassermann]
Total eclipse of the moon. Mondfinsternis 15.6.2011.
alternative Titel: la spectre de la rose könig laurins rosengarten bartholomäusnacht bidan (canari) matthäus passion, versteinerte Nackenrolle der Hejan Hofdamen Sei Shōnagon Kopfkissenbuch, The pillow book, Kopfkissenhefte, 枕草子, Makura no Sōshi, Rosenblatt, Engel angel 35 33 Vogelscheuche Rotkäppchen nachts im Wald, .... Ästhetizismus
Part of the set: MORPH.
Manipulation1 fotobearbeitung DMC-G2 - P1050164 #pomegranate #granatapfel #schnittmuster #sewingpattern #design #entwurf #spiegel #mirror #physalis #kapstachelbeer #lampion #lampionblume #schnittmuster #musterbogen #sewingpattern #design #entwurf #toledo #memory #erinnerung #kimono #tapestry #tapisserie #weaver #teppichweber #tapis #gloom #gloomy #farbe #color #colour #nacht #night #evening #night #evening #abend #abends #nächtens #nächtlich #schlaf #sleep
ANAR - The pomegranate...!!
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Please don't copy, edit or use this image on websites, blogs or other media. However if you are interested in using any of my images, please feel free to contact with me.
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ArtRage, Acdsee, Photoshop
Part of the set: "Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext" // Variations "blindtext": literally translation of the German word Blindtext = dummy text, dummy page.
Die Variable: von lateinisch variabilis: veränderbar.
In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter.
In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen.
Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
Basic picture: AR17_2_19_9_2013
... heißen nicht so, weil sie aussehen wie Granaten, vielmehr kommt der Artname granatum (von lateinisch granum, „Korn“, „Kern“, „Samen“) von den zahlreichen in den Früchten enthaltenen Samenkörnern. :-)
Auf dem Bild sieht man übrigens die kleineren Zwerggranatäpfel.
Aufgenommen mit der Minolta X-700 und dem Minolta MD 50 mm 1:1.7 (MDIII).
canmom's Most Interesting Photos on Flickriver
Fun facts;
The name "pomegranate" derives from Latin pomum ("apple") and granatus ("seeded"). This has influenced the common name for pomegranate in many languages (e.g. German Granatapfel, seeded apple). The genus name Punica is named for the Phoenicians, who were active in broadening its cultivation, partly for religious reasons. In classical Latin, where "malum" was broadly applied to many apple-like fruits, the pomegranate's name was malum punicum or malum granatum, the latter giving rise to the Italian name melograno, or less commonly melagrana.
In Russia the fruit is called Granat, thought to have influenced the word Granata meaning Grenade. The shape of the fruit and its contents of many small objects (seeds) makes it look like a grenade.
And in Latin America, the fruit is named "granada", also meaning grenade.
Even though this fruit does not originate from China, one common nickname is "Chinese apple."
November 2014
Punica granatum
Der Gattungsname Punica leitet sich von lateinisch puniceus, „punisch“ ab und geht auf die römische Bezeichnung für die Phönizier zurück. Der Artname granatum (von lateinisch granum, „Korn“, „Kern“, „Samen“) wurde wegen der zahlreichen in den Früchten enthaltenen Samenkörner geprägt. (Quelle s.u.)
Salvador Dali, Figueres (Katalonien) 1804 - 1989
Traum, verursacht durch den Flug einer Biene um einen Granatapfel, eine Sekunde vor dem Aufwachen - Dream caused by the flight of a bumblebee around a pomegranate a second before awakening (1944)
Museum Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid
The sleeping figure of Gala, Dalí’s wife and muse, floats above a rock in a tranquil marine landscape. Beside her naked body, two drops of water, a pomegranate and a bee are also airborne. Gala’s dream, prompted by the buzzing of the bee, appears in the upper part of the canvas; there, from an exploding pomegranate shoots out a fish, from whose mouth two ferocious tigers emerge together with a bayonet which, one second later, will wake Gala from her restful sleep. Although by 1944 Dalí was already living in America and devoting little time to painting, this canvas marks a return to his ‘paranoiac-critical method.’ His view—based on Freudian theories—that images were open to multiple interpretations made him one of the leading members of the Surrealist group.
In this “hand-painted dream photograph” — as Dalí generally called his paintings — we find a seascape of distant horizons and calm waters, perhaps Port Lligat, amidst which Gala, once again, is the subject of the scene. Next to the naked body of the sleeping woman, which levitates above a flat rock that floats above the sea, Dalí depicts two suspended droplets of water and a pomegranate, a Christian symbol of fertility and resurrection. Above her flies a bee, an insect that traditionally symbolises the Virgin. In Gala’s mind the buzzing of the bee is translated into a dream in which a huge fish bursts out of the pomegranate in the upper part, and in turn spews out two menacing tigers and a bayonet; a second later the bayonet will sting Gala in the arm. Above them an elephant with long flamingo legs, found in other compositions of the period, carries on its back an obelisk — like Bernini’s elephant in the Piazza Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome — which symbolises the power of the pope.
Extract from www.museothyssen.org/en/collection/artists/dali-salvador/...l
ich liebe den Herbst :)
Ich hab mich entschlossen (s. vorige Bilder): Banale und wenig sagende Bilder werde ich weiterhin öffentlich zeigen (wie im nächsten Fall), andere persönlichere Bilder, oder da, wo ich meine Laune preisgebe, werde ich nur für Freunde und Familie hochladen - schließlich bin ich nicht da, um Preise oder Favs zu sammeln, obwohl es eventuell für manche Fotos etwas schade ist, sondern um nette Kontakte zu haben.
Falls jemand, der noch nicht zu meinen "Freunden und Familie" gehört, Interesse hat, bitte anschreiben. Den Text werd ich noch an den nächsten Tagen wiederholen, habt bitte Geduld.
So kann ich wahrscheinlich damit leben, mal sehen. Und danke vielmals für Eure Treue :))
Adoro l'autunno :)
Grazie a tutti. MI sono decisa (cfr. foto precedenti): foto banali, che non dicono molto o non hanno gran riferimenti personali, come questa, le lascio pubbliche, quelle invece con riferimenti umorali o personali le metto su solo per "amici e famiglia". Da una parte è peccato per qualche foto che forse meriterebbe comunque, ma in fin dei conti non son qua per collezionare fav o premi, ma per avere dei bei contatti. Se è interessato anche qualcuno che non appare ancora fra i miei "amici e famiglia", mi scriva pure.
Probabilmente riesco ad arrangiarmi in questo modo, vediamo. Ripeterò ancora diversi giorni questo annuncio, abbiate pazienza.
Grazie ad ogni modo per la vostra fedeltà :)
Rosh HaShanah (ראש השנה) is the Jewish New Year. Over the centuries it has become associated with many food customs, for instance, eating sweet food to symbolize our hopes for a "Sweet New Year."
שנה טובה ומתוקה - Have A Sweet And Good Year!
Happy Rosh HaShanah!
On Rosh Hashanah we wish each other "L'Shanah Tovah Tikatevu" may you be written (in The Book Of Life) for a good year. But Rosh HaShanah is not the end of the judgment, it is only on Yom Kippur that our judgment is made final - Written And Sealed.
Honey (Apples and Honey)
Biblical texts often mention "honey" as the sweetener of choice though some historians believe that the honey referenced in the Bible was actually a sort of fruit paste. Real honey was, of course, available but much more difficult to acquire! Honey represented good living and wealth. The Land of Israel is often called the land of "milk and honey" in the Bible.
On the first night of Rosh Hashanah, we dip challah into honey and say the blessing over the challah. Then we dip apple slices into honey and say a prayer asking God for a sweet year. Slices of apple dipped in honey are often served to Jewish children – either at home or in religious school - as a special Rosh HaShanah snack.
Round Challah
After apples and honey, round loaves of challah are the most recognizable food symbol of Rosh HaShanah. Challah is a kind of braided egg bread that is traditionally served by Jews on Shabbat. During Rosh HaShanah, however, the loaves are shaped into spirals or rounds symbolizing the continuity of Creation. Sometimes raisins or honey are added to the recipe in order to make the resulting loaves extra sweet. (Click here to learn more about challah shapes and meanings.)
Honey Cake
Many Jewish households make honey cakes on Rosh HaShanah as another way to symbolically express their wishes for a Sweet New Year. Often people will use a recipe that has been passed down through the generations. Honey cake can be made with a variety of spices, though autumnal spices (cloves, cinnamon, allspice) are especially popular. Different recipes call for the use of coffee, tea, orange juice or even rum to add an additional dimension of flavor.
New Fruit
On the second night of Rosh Hashanah, we eat a "new fruit" – meaning, a fruit that has recently come into season but that we have not yet had the opportunity to eat. When we eat this new fruit, we say the shehechiyanu blessing thanking God for keeping us alive and bringing us to this season. This ritual reminds us to appreciate the fruits of the earth and being alive to enjoy them.
A pomegranate is often used as this new fruit. In the Bible, the Land of Israel is praised for its pomegranates. It is also said that this fruit contains 613 seeds just as there are 613 mitzvot. Another reason given for blessing and eating pomegranate on Rosh HaShanah is that we wish that our good deeds in the ensuing year will be as plentiful as the seeds of the pomegranate.
Fish
Rosh HaShanah literally means "head of the year" in Hebrew. For this reason in some Jewish communities it is traditional to eat the head of a fish during the Rosh HaShanah holiday meal. Fish is also eaten because it is an ancient symbol of fertility and abundance.
Sources:
Faye Levy's International Jewish Cookbook, A Time Warner Company, 1991.
The Spice and Spirit of Kosher-Jewish Cooking, Lubavitch Women’s Organization, 1977.
Alphabet Soup: Jewish Family Cooking from A to Z, Schechter Day Schools, 1990.
A Treasury of Jewish Holiday Baking. Goldman, Marcy. 1996.
judaism.about.com/od/holidays/a/Rosh-Hashanah-Food-Custom...
I have one Pomegranate tree or bush that I planted, and a number that the birds started... The trees in our gardens do make beautiful and delicious fruit... They are hardy here in Tucson, even though the top branches of the more exposed trees are killed back each year by frost. The flowers are gorgeous!
The focus is on the strong branches within... How does the camera do that? It probably detects edges as indicated by sudden light to dark changes over a number of contiguous pixels in a line in any of a number of directions... I suspect the depth of field and the distance from the subject affects that.
I am beginning to experiment to gain some degree of control over that focusing by taking half steps backwards in a series of shots...
Here are excerpts from an article by the California Rare Fruit Growers that can help a gardener like me:
www.crfg.org/pubs/ff/pomegranate.html
POMEGRANATE
Punica granatum L.
Punicaceae
Common Names: Pomegranate, Granada (Spanish), Grenade (French).
Related Species: Punica proto-punica.
Origin: The pomegranate is native from Iran to the Himalayas in northern India and was cultivated and naturalized over the whole Mediterranean region since ancient times. It is widely cultivated throughout India and the drier parts of southeast Asia, Malaya, the East Indies and tropical Africa. The tree was introduced into California by Spanish settlers in 1769. In this country it is grown for its fruits mainly in the drier parts of California and Arizona.
Adaptation: Pomegranates prefer a semi-arid mild-temperate to subtropical climate and are naturally adapted to regions with cool winters and hot summers. A humid climate adversely affects the formation of fruit. The tree can be severely injured by temperatures below 12° F. In the U. S. pomegranates can be grown outside as far north as southern Utah and Washington, D.C. but seldom set fruit in these areas. The tree adapts well to container culture and will sometimes fruit in a greenhouse.
DESCRIPTION
Growth Habits: The pomegranate is a neat, rounded shrub or small tree that can grow to 20 or 30 ft., but more typically to 12 to 16 ft. in height. Dwarf varieties are also known. It is usually deciduous, but in certain areas the leaves will persist on the tree. The trunk is covered by a red-brown bark which later becomes gray. The branches are stiff, angular and often spiny. There is a strong tendency to sucker from the base. Pomegranates are also long-lived. There are specimens in Europe that are known to be over 200 years of age. The vigor of a pomegranate declines after about 15 years, however.
Foliage: The pomegranate has glossy, leathery leaves that are narrow and lance-shaped.
Flowers: The attractive scarlet, white or variegated flowers are over an inch across and have 5 to 8 crumpled petals and a red, fleshy, tubular calyx which persists on the fruit. The flowers may be solitary or grouped in twos and threes at the ends of the branches. The pomegranate is self-pollinated as well as cross-pollinated by insects. Cross-pollination increases the fruit set. Wind pollination is insignificant.
Fruit: The nearly round, 2-1/2 to 5 in. wide fruit is crowned at the base by the prominent calyx. The tough, leathery skin or rind is typically yellow overlaid with light or deep pink or rich red. The interior is separated by membranous walls and white, spongy, bitter tissue into compartments packed with sacs filled with sweetly acid, juicy, red, pink or whitish pulp or aril. In each sac there is one angular, soft or hard seed. High temperatures are essential during the fruiting period to get the best flavor. The pomegranate may begin to bear in 1 year after planting out, but 2-1/2 to 3 years is more common. Under suitable conditions the fruit should mature some 5 to 7 months after bloom.
CULTIVARS
Balegal
Originated in San Diego, Calif. Selected by Paul H. Thomson. Large, roundish fruit, 3 inches in diameter. Somewhat larger than Fleshman. Skin pale pink, lighter then Fleshman. Flesh slightly darker than Fleshman, very sweet.
Cloud
From the Univ. of Calif., Davis pomegranate collection. Medium-sized fruit with a green-red color. Juice sweet and white.
Crab
From the Univ. of Calif., Davis pomegranate collection. Large fruit have red juice that is tart but with a rich flavor. A heavy bearing tree.
Early Wonderful
Large, deep-red, thin-skinned, delicious fruit. Ripens about 2 weeks ahead of Wonderful. Medium-sized bush with large, orange-red fertile flowers. Blooms late, very productive.
Fleshman
Originated in Fallbrook, Calif. Selected by Paul H. Thomson. Large, roundish fruit, about 3 inches in diameter, pink outside and in. Very sweet flavor, seeds relatively soft, quality very good.
Francis
Originated in Jamaica via Florida. Large, sweet, split-resistant fruit. Prolific producer.
Granada
Originated in Lindsay, Calif. Introduced in 1966. Bud mutation of Wonderful. Fruit resembles Wonderful, but displays a red crown while in the green state, darker red in color and less tart. Ripens one month earlier than Wonderful. Flowers also deeper red. Tree identical to Wonderful.
Green Globe
Originated in Camarillo, Calif. Selected by John Chater. Large, sweet, aromatic, green-skinned fruit. Excellent quality.
Home
From the Univ. of Calif., Davis pomegranate collection. The fruit is variable yellow-red in color, with light pink juice that is sweet and of rich flavor. Some bitterness.
King
From the Univ. of Calif., Davis pomegranate collection. Medium to large fruit, somewhat smaller than Balegal and Fleshman. Skin darker pink to red. Flavor very sweet. Has a tendency to split. Bush somewhat of a shy bearer.
Phoenicia (Fenecia)
Originated in Camarillo, Calif. Selected by John Chater. Large fruit, 4-5 inches in diameter, mottled red-green skin. Flavor sweet, seeds relatively hard.
Sweet
Fruit is lighter in color than Wonderful, remains slightly greenish with a red blush when ripe. Pink juice, flavor much sweeter than other cultivars. Excellent in fruit punch. Trees highly ornamental, bears at an early age, productive.
Utah Sweet
Very sweet, good quality fruit. Pink skin and pulp. Seeds notably softer than those of Wonderful and other standard cultivars. Attractive pinkish-orange flowers.
Wonderful
Originated in Florida. First propagated in California in 1896. Large, deep purple-red fruit. Rind medium thick, tough. Flesh deep crimson in color, juicy and of a delicious vinous flavor. Seeds not very hard. Better for juicing than for eating out of hand. Plant is vigorous and productive. Leading commercial variety in California.
CULTURE
Location: Pomegranates should be placed in the sunniest, warmest part of the yard or orchard for the best fruit, although they will grow and flower in part shade. The attractive foliage, flowers and fruits of the pomegranate, as well as its smallish size make it a excellent landscaping plant.
Soil: The pomegranate does best in well-drained ordinary soil, but also thrives on calcareous or acidic loam as well as rock strewn gravel.
Irrigation: Once established, pomegranates can take considerable drought, but for good fruit production they must be irrigated. To establish new plants they should be watered every 2 to 4 weeks during the dry season. The plants are tolerant of moderately saline water and soil conditions.
Fertilizing: In the West, the trees are given 2 to 4-ounce applications of ammonium sulfate or other nitrogen fertilizer the first two springs. After that very little fertilizer is needed, although the plants respond to an annual mulch of rotted manure or other compost.
Pruning: Plants should be cut back when they are about 2 ft. high. From this point allow 4 or 5 shoots to develop, which should be evenly distributed around the stem to keep the plant well balanced. These should start about 1 ft. from the ground, giving a short but well-defined trunk. Any shoots which appear above or below should be removed as should any suckers. Since the fruits are borne only at the tips of new growth, it is recommended that for the first 3 years the branches be judiciously shortened annually to encourage the maximum number of new shoots on all sides, prevent straggly development and achieve a strong well framed plant. After the 3rd year, only suckers and dead branches are removed.
Propagation: The pomegranate can be raised from seed but may not come true. Cuttings root easily and plants from them bear fruit after about 3 years. Twelve to 20 inches long cuttings should be taken in winter from mature, one-year old wood. The leaves should be removed and the cuttings treated with rooting hormone and inserted about two-thirds their length into the soil or into some other warm rooting medium. Plants can also be air-layered but grafting is seldom successful.
Pests and Diseases: Pomegranates are relatively free of most pests and diseases. Minor problems are leaf and fruit spot and foliar damage by white flies, thrips, mealybugs and scale insects. The roots are seldom bothered by gophers but deer will browse on the foliage.
Harvest: The fruits are ripe when they have developed a distinctive color and make a metallic sound when tapped. The fruits must be picked before over maturity when they tend to crack open, particularly when rained on. The pomegranate is equal to the apple in having a long storage life. It is best maintained at a temperature of 32° to 41° F. and can be kept for a period of 7 months within this temperature range and at 80 to 85% relative humidity without shrinking or spoiling. The fruits improve in storage, becoming juicier and more flavorful.
The fruit can be eaten out of hand by deeply scoring several times vertically and then breaking it apart. The clusters of juice sacs are then lifted out and eaten. The sacs also make an attractive garnish when sprinkled on various dishes. Pomegranate fruits are most often consumed as juice and can be juiced is several ways. The sacs can be removed and put through a basket press or the juice can be extracted by reaming the halved fruits on an ordinary orange juice squeezer. Another approach starts with warming the fruit slightly and rolling it between the hands to soften the interior. A hole is then cut in the stem end which is placed on a glass to let the juice run out, squeezing the fruit from time to time to get all the juice. The juice can be used in a variety of of ways: as a fresh juice, to make jellies, sorbets or cold or hot sauces as well as to flavor cakes, baked apples, etc. Pomegranate syrup is sold commercially as grenadine. The juice can also be made into a wine.
Commercial Potential: The primary commercial growing regions of the world are the Near East, India and surrounding countries and southern Europe. In California commercial cultivation is centered in the southern San Joaquin Valley. Consumer demand in this country is not great. More pomegranate fruits probably wind up as decorations in fruit bowls than are consumed.
_____________________________________________
Also see the more general Wikipedia article. It has a section on use in cooking by regions of the world:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pomegranate
Here are a few highlights that struck my fancy:
A pomegranate (Punica granatum) is a fruit-bearing deciduous shrub or small tree growing to between five and eight meters tall. Native to the drier regions of the Mediterranean Basin, pomegranate is widely cultivated throughout India and parts of southeast Asia, Malaya, the East Indies and tropical Africa.[1] Introduced into Latin America and California by Spanish settlers in 1769, pomegranate is now cultivated in parts of California and Arizona for juice production. [2]
Scientific Classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Subclass: Rosidae
Order: Myrtales
Family: Lythraceae
Genus: Punica
Species: P. granatum
Binomial Name
Punica granatum - Linnaeus (Carl von Linné)
Synonyms
Punica malus - Linnaeus, 1758
Cultivars
More than 500 cultivars of pomegranate have been named, but such fruits evidently have considerable synonymy in which the same genotype is named differently across regions of the world.[4] Iran hosts a great genetic diversity of pomegranate and more than 760 Iranian genotypes are collected at Iranian national pomegranate collection in Yazd, Iran.
Several characteristics between pomegranate genotypes vary for identification, consumer preference, preferred use, and marketing, the most important of which are fruit size, exocarp color (ranging from yellow to purple, with pink and red most common), aril color (ranging from white to red), hardness of seed, maturity, juice content and its acidity, sweetness, and astringency.[4]
Etymology
The name "pomegranate" derives from Latin pomum ("apple") and granatus ("seeded"). This has influenced the common name for pomegranate in many languages (e.g., German Granatapfel, "Granat" meaning "garnet" and "Apfel" meaning "apple", thus "garnet apple"). Perhaps stemming from the French word for the fruit, "pomme-grenade", the pomegranate was known in early English as "apple of Grenada" -- a term which today survives only in heraldic blazons. This was probably a folk etymology, confusing Latin granatus with the Spanish city of Granada. The genus name Punica is named for the Phoenicians, who were active in broadening its cultivation, partly for religious reasons. In classical Latin, where "malum" was broadly applied to many apple-like fruits, the pomegranate's name was malum punicum or malum granatum, the latter giving rise to the Italian name melograno, or less commonly melagrana.
Potential health benefits
In preliminary laboratory research and human pilot studies, juice of the pomegranate was effective in reducing heart disease risk factors, including LDL oxidation, macrophage oxidative status, and foam cell formation,[35][36][37] all of which are steps in atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease.
In a limited study of hypertensive patients, consumption of pomegranate juice for two weeks was shown to reduce systolic blood pressure by inhibiting serum angiotensin-converting enzyme.[38] Juice consumption may also inhibit viral infections[39] while pomegranate extracts have antibacterial effects against dental plaque.[40][41]
Culinary use
After opening the pomegranate by scoring it with a knife and breaking it open, the arils (seed casings) are separated from the peel and internal white pulp membranes. Separating the red arils is easier in a bowl of water, because the arils sink and the inedible pulp floats. Freezing the entire fruit also makes it easier to separate. Another very effective way of quickly harvesting the arils is to cut the pomegranate in half, score each half of the exterior rind four to six times, hold the pomegranate half over a bowl and smack the rind with a large spoon. The arils should eject from the pomegranate directly into the bowl, leaving only a dozen or more deeply embedded arils to remove.
The entire seed is consumed raw, though the watery, tasty aril is the desired part. The taste differs depending on the subspecies of pomegranate and its ripeness. The pomegranate juice can be very sweet or sour, but most fruits are moderate in taste, with sour notes from the acidic tannins contained in the aril juice.
Pomegranate juice has long been a popular drink in Persian and Indian cuisine, and began to be widely distributed in the United States and Canada in 2002.[12]
Grenadine syrup is thickened and sweetened pomegranate juice used in cocktail mixing. Before tomatoes (a new-world fruit) arrived in the Middle East, grenadine was widely used in many Iranian foods, and is still found in traditional recipes such as fesenjan, a thick sauce made from pomegranate juice and ground walnuts, usually spooned over duck or other poultry and rice, and in ash-e anar (pomegranate soup).[13]
Wild pomegranate seeds are used as a spice known as anardana (from Persian: anar+dana, pomegranate+seed), most notably in Indian and Pakistani cuisine, but also as a substitute for pomegranate syrup in Persian cuisine. Dried whole arils can often be obtained in ethnic Indian subcontinent markets. These seeds are separated from the flesh, dried for 10–15 days and used as an acidic agent for chutney and curry preparation. Ground anardana is also used, which results in a deeper flavoring in dishes and prevents the seeds from getting stuck in teeth. Seeds of the wild pomegranate variety known as daru from the Himalayas are regarded as quality sources for this spice.
Dried pomegranate arils, found in some natural specialty food markets, still contain the seed and residual aril water, maintaining a natural sweet and tart flavor. Dried arils can be used in several culinary applications, such as trail mix, granola bars, or as a topping for salad, yogurt, or ice cream. Chocolate covered arils, also available in gourmet food stores, may be added to desserts and baked items.
In the Caucasus, pomegranate is used mainly as juice.[14] In Azerbaijan a sauce from pomegranate juice (narsharab) is usually served with fish[15] or tika kabab. In Turkey, pomegranate sauce, (Turkish: nar ekşisi) is used as a salad dressing, to marinate meat, or simply to drink straight. Pomegranate seeds are also used in salads and sometimes as garnish for desserts such as güllaç.[16] Pomegranate syrup or molasses is used in muhammara, a roasted red pepper, walnut, and garlic spread popular in Syria and Turkey.[17]
In Greece, pomegranate (Greek: ρόδι, rodi) is used in many recipes, including kollivozoumi, a creamy broth made from boiled wheat, pomegranates and raisins, legume salad with wheat and pomegranate, traditional Middle Eastern lamb kebabs with pomegranate glaze, pomegranate eggplant relish, and avocado-pomegranate dip. Pomegranate is also made into a liqueur and popular fruit confectionery used as ice cream topping or mixed with yogurt or spread as jam on toast. In Cyprus as well as in Greece and among the Greek Orthodox Diaspora , ρόδι is used to make kolliva, a mixture of wheat, pomegranate seeds, sugar, almonds and other seeds served at memorial services.
In present-day cuisine, pomegranate can be used to add a creative touch to green salads or potato or chickpea-based salads.[18]
IMG_4305_2
Ankunft Schal ablegen Schal umlegen Aufbruch (Schal by Linusch)
Snapshot notes from work in telegraphese - Shared Working Room, Shared Working Table.
Selbstportrait AbesseAdesse: Kinderkrapfen (Erdbeermarmelade, Schokoglasur, Konfetti) Der Mann der verwöhnt Langegasse beim Narrenturm (Krapfen 2014, 31 / 40 Krapfentage 2014), Monolith, Spitzer, Federpennal, Arizona Pomegranate Green Tea Flasche Wasser.
Part of ""res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme rückschau vorschau"" // Krapfensammlung, Krapfen 31 2014 // Alltag // Aquarius // Selfportraits AbsentPresent - Shared Working Table // "Empty Padded ~ LeerGefüllt - Time at Work" - Left handed drawings and writings on the empty left pages of my prompter`s book: Soufflierbuch "Harvey" (Mary Chase) Page 53 14.5.2013, 25.2.2014
Polyptych 5 Photos: DMC-G2 - P1770514 - 2014-02-25 DMC-G2 - P1770515 - 2014-02-25 DMC-G2 - P1770518 - 2014-02-25 DMC-G2 - P1770520 - 2014-02-25 DMC-G2 - P1770528 - 2014-02-25
Als Nutzpflanzen bekannt sind vor allem P. edulis, P. quadrangularis und P. ligularis, welche die bekannten Früchte Maracuja (auch verwendete Schreibweise: Marakuja) bzw. Grenadilla (Granadilla) hervorbringen.
Die Früchte sind botanisch gesehen Beeren. Früchte der Gattung, die von Menschen gegessen werden, nennt man je nach Art Maracuja oder Grenadillen (auch Granadillen). Sie sind eiförmig, haben eine feste Haut und enthalten innen einen oft bitter bis süßlich oder auch extrem sauer schmeckenden Saft mit vielen essbaren Kernen (ähnlich wie Granatäpfel). Sie enthalten viel Vitamin C.
Der Saft von Passiflora edulis wird auch unter der lateinamerikanischen Bezeichnung Maracuyá (Venezuela: Parchita) in Fruchtsaftgetränke gemischt.
Die Blätter von Passionsblumen (weitestgehend auf die Art Passiflora incarnata beschränkt) werden in der Phytotherapie gegen nervöse Unruhe, Anspannung, Reizbarkeit oder Angstzustände und damit zusammenhängende Schlafstörungen, Rückenschmerzen und Verspannungen oder Herzbeschwerden oder Magen- Darmbeschwerden eingesetzt, ferner auch bei depressiver Verstimmung, Hysterie oder Asthma.
Snapshot notes from work
Quadriptych: Shared Working Table before the Performance / Drawing with Still Life "Free Assoziations": anatomical model of the heart / continued drawing with Still Life "Free Assoziations": red bell pepper / Working Table before going home.
Selbstportrait AbesseAdesse: Rucksack, "Arizona Pomegranate" Flasche Wasser, Souffleusenschlüssel, Mappe, anatomisches Modell vom Herzen, rote Paprikaschote ganz, rote Paprikaschote zerrissen. Leselämpchen
Part of "res noscenda" // Alltag // Aquarius // Selfportraits AbsentPresent - Shared Working Table // "Empty Padded ~ LeerGefüllt - Time at Work" - Left handed drawings and writings on the empty left pages of my prompter`s book: Soufflierbuch "Die Goldberg-Variationen" (George Tabori): Page 21, Drawin 12.10.2012, 11.12.2013
Quadriptychon:
DMC-G2 - P1710625
DMC-G2 - P1710629
DMC-G2 - P1710632
DMC-G2 - P1710636 - 2013-12-11
digital painting with ArtRage, Merge with photoshop
Part of "res noscenda" / ungeschenkte Geschenke Unpresented Presents - he made me a present and does not hand it to me // Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext
"blindtext": literally translation of the German word Blindtext = dummy text, dummy page.
Die Variable: von lateinisch variabilis: veränderbar.
In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter.
In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen.
Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
Arvo Paert: "Perpetuum Mobile"
AR22_25_9_2013 Using: AR18_2_13_9_2013 Photo: DMC-G2 - P1570429 - 2013-03-21
ArtRage, Acdsee, Photoshop
Part of the set: "Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext" // Variations "blindtext": literally translation of the German word Blindtext = dummy text, dummy page.
Die Variable: von lateinisch variabilis: veränderbar.
In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter.
In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen.
Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
Basic picture: AR17_2_19_9_2013
digital painting with ArtRage
Part of "res noscenda" / ungeschenkte Geschenke Unpresented Presents - he made me a present and does not hand it to me // Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext
"blindtext": literally translation of the German word Blindtext = dummy text, dummy page.
Die Variable: von lateinisch variabilis: veränderbar.
In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter.
In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen. Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
Arvo Paert: "Perpetuum Mobile"
AR22_25_9_2013 Using: AR18_2_13_9_2013
Friede- : umfriedeter (abgegrenzt durch Mauer, Zaun, Hecke,...) Besitz
-mann: althochdeutsch "man" Krieger
Auswahl an austauschbaren Titeln: Stifter Wolken, marmoriert a la Loos, La spectre de la rose, Rosenblattvariationen, Leidensblätter, Bach Matthäuspassion, Herz im Glas, Ausbruch des Vesuv, Vogelscheuchen, des Kriegers blutige Tagträume ...
Part of the set: "Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext" // Variations //
Basic picture: AR17_2_19_9_2013 Using: ArtRage, Acdsee, Photoshop
6 Variations on an online generated drawing - created with: ScribblerToo www.zefrank.com/scribbler/scribblertoo/, doodl doodl.net, processing with acdsee, collage done with photoshop
"blindtext": literally translation of the German word Blindtext = dummy text, dummy page.
Die Variable: von lateinisch variabilis: veränderbar. In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter.
In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen.
Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
Arvo Paert: "Perpetuum Mobile" (youtube)
6VariationsCollage_doodlNet_2_13_9_2013_Kiomono_SchribblerToo_1_12_9_2013
Der Granatapfel oder Grenadine ist eine Pflanzenart, die heute bei weiter Fassung der Familie der Weiderichgewächse zugerechnet wird.
Helmut Qualtinger liest "Die letzten Tage der Menschheit"
Porträt Thomas Schulte-Michels / Sanguine Blei Sepia / Woyzeck auf Erbsendiät über die doppelte Natur, wenn die Welt zu Spinnweb zerrinnt.
Mandarinen, Arizona Ice Tea Pomegranate, MezzoMix, Ströck Sackerl mit Krapfendekoration, Federpennal, Federschachtel, Schleifpapier, Pastellstift Ivory black, Leselampe, Taschenlampe, Souffleusenschlüssel
Part of: "res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme rückschau vorschau" // "Empty Padded Time at Work" Prompter`s book ~ Soufflierbücher "Die letzten Tage der Menschheit" (Karl Kraus) / "Woyzeck (Georg Büchner, Robert Wilson, Tom Waits) // aquarius - aggregate states solid, liquid, gaseous - Wasserflasche
Triptych:
DMC-G2 - P1790543 - 2014-04-30
DMC-G2 - P1790544 - 2014-04-30
DMC-G2 - P1790545 - 2014-04-30
"AMADEUS BACKSTAGE"
Snapshot notes from work in telegraphese - Shared Working Room, Shared Working Table.
Part of ""res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme rückschau vorschau"" // Alltag - shared working table, shared working room // Aquarius // Ego Selfportrait AbsentPresent // "Empty Padded ~ LeerGefüllt - Time at Work" - Prompter`s book ~ Soufflierbuch "Die letzten Tage der Menschheit" Page 7 / "Woyzeck" (Georg Büchner, Bob Wilson, Tom Waits). Drawing Page 16
Triptychon:
DMC-G2 - P1790296 - 2014-04-16
DMC-G2 - P1790299 - 2014-04-16
DMC-G2 - P1790306 - 2014-04-16
digital drawing with artrage, collage with photoshop
"blindtext": literally translation of the German word Blindtext = dummy text, dummy page.
Die Variable: von lateinisch variabilis: veränderbar.
In der formalen Logik: „ein sprachliches Zeichen, für das beliebige Ausdrücke einer bestimmten Art eingesetzt werden können“
Variable verwendet man auch in der Mathematik.
In der Typographie dient der sogenannte Blindtext als Platzhalter. In der Informatik gibt es die Wildcard als Jokerzeichen.
Erstmals verwendet wurden Variable in der formalen Logik und zwar schon von Aristoteles.
Arvo Paert: "Perpetuum Mobile"
8 x AR18_3_13.9.2013_Kimono_Schnittmuster_Musterbogen
#musterbogen #schnittmuster #kimono #tapestry #tapisserie #teppich #carpet #teppchweber #weben #weave
Woyzeck: "Ja, Andres, den Streif da über das Gras hin, da rollt abends der Kopf. Es hob ihn einmal einer auf, er meint`, es wär ein Igel; drei Tag und drei Nächt, und er lag auf den Hobelspänen"
Woyzeck: "... there rolls the head in the evening. One took it up, he thought that it is a hedgehog; after three days and three nights he was dead"
Snapshot notes from work. Collage in telegraphese, Shared Working Table at the Shared Working Room.
Selbstportrait AbesseAdesse: "Arizona Pomegranate Green Tea" Flasche Wasser, 6 Trüffelkugeln 5 ganz 1 angebissen "Confiserie zum süßen Eck" Langegasse/Währingerstrasse, Papierwischer, Jacke, Schal, Textbuch
Part of "res noscenda" // Alltag - shared working table, shared working room // Aquarius // Ego Selfportrait AbsentPresent // "Empty Padded ~ LeerGefüllt - Time at Work" - Prompter`s book ~ Soufflierbuch "Woyzeck" (Georg Büchner, Bob Wilson, Tom Waits). Drawing Page 9
Triptych
DMC-G2 - P1730470
DMC-G2 - P1730474
DMC-G2 - P1730490 - 2014-01-07
Friede- : umfriedeter (abgegrenzt durch Mauer, Zaun, Hecke,...) Besitz
-mann: althochdeutsch "man" Krieger
Auswahl an austauschbaren Titeln: Stifter Wolken, marmoriert a la Loos, La spectre de la rose, Rosenblattvariationen, Leidensblätter, Bach Matthäuspassion, Herz im Glas, Ausbruch des Vesuv, Vogelscheuchen, des Kriegers blutige Tagträume ...
Part of the set: "Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext" // Variations //
Basic picture: AR17_2_19_9_2013 Using: ArtRage, Acdsee, Photoshop
Cocooning beschreibt das Zurückziehen in die eigenen vier Wände, Den Trend hin zum Einigeln.
Es steht für die schwindende Lust der Menschen, Neuland zu entdecken, ebenso für das Schrumpfen des eigenen Verantwortungshorizonts und für eine gewisse Gleichgültigkeit, die in der hoch individualisierten Gesellschaft um sich greift
digital painting with ArtRage, merge with photoshop
Part of "res noscenda" / ungeschenkte Geschenke Unpresented Presents - he made me a present and does not hand it to me // Unanswered Request for a Painting - 2 Paintings Wanting a Neighbor - *) the Void *) the Variable, a Blindtext
AR22_25_9_2013 AR18_2_13_9_2013
Photo: DMC-G2 - P1500706 19.9. 2012
#cocoon #kokon #kimono #schnittmuster #entfalten #falter #entwurf #chrysalis #chrysalides #chrysalises #pupa #puppe
Tatiana Nikolayeva plays Goldberg Variations Johann Sebastian Bach (youtube).
Snapshot notes from work in telegraphese - Shared Working Room, Shared Working Table.
Selbstporträt AbesseAdesse: Minidonut: petite france am Westbahnhof Le Crobag (Krapfen 2014 11 u. 12 / 40 Krapfentage 2014), Arizona Pomegranate Green Tea Flasche Wasser, Radiergummi, Bleistift, Stabilo, Jacke, Schal
Part of: "res noscenda note notiz sketch skizze material sammlung collection entwurf überlegung gedanke brainstorming musterbogen schnittmuster zwischenbilanz bestandsaufnahme rückschau vorschau" // Alltag - shared working table, shared working room // Aquarius // Ego Selfportrait AbsentPresent // "Empty Padded ~ LeerGefüllt - Time at Work" - Prompter`s book ~ Soufflierbuch "Goldberg Variationen" (George Tabori). Drawing Page 12 13.10.2012, 5.2.2014
Triptych:
DMC-G2 - P1750121 - 2014-02-05
DMC-G2 - P1750123 - 2014-02-05
DMC-G2 - P1750128 - 2014-02-05