View allAll Photos Tagged pineapple
These beautiful tiny blooms are so colorful and detailed, yet hard to find.. Had to post another view.
The only pineapple in my backyard. This is its second fruit in more than a year. This is "Maui Pineapple". It should turn to a golden color as it grows. I can't wait to pick it. Well, you can't have the fruit. So, just enjoy the photo!
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The colors of this medium-sized Pineapple are astounding. Only Peter Max and Mother Nature could have thought them up! Roses, yellows, oranges, pinks, curvy edges, prickers, stickers. More color and texture than the mind can usually conceive!
Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden, Miami FL
About 30 years ago when we were first landscaping our property, I wanted a privacy hedge. I then saw an article in the Los Angeles Times recommending the pineapple guava plant as one of the most rewarding plants that we could grown in our area. Attractive shrubbery, beautiful blossoms great tasting fruit in the fall, and fairly fast growing. It's also reasonable drought tolerant. It's now an 8 foot hedge with wonderful fruit that we eat in the fall. It is neither in the pineapple or guava family
I lit this with a YN560-III in an 8.6 inch Lastolite softbox hand held at camera left. The flash was in manual mode, and was triggered by a Yongnuo RF-603N.
Other plants, flowers, fruit or thingys that I've photographed using strobes can be seen in my Strobe Lit Plant album. In the description for that set, I list resources that I've used to learn how to light with off camera flash. www.flickr.com/photos/9422.
Virgin America Airbus A320-214 N281VA "pineapple express" arrives San Diego (SAN/KSAN) February 29, 2016. Redwood 954 from San Francisco.
Recipe:
Pineapple jam
4 pineapples
2 cinnamon stick
2 star anise
6 cloves
300g sugar (or more to taste)
1. Peel and core pineapples. Cut into long segments and hand grate with a box grater. (This keeps the pineapple pulp fibrous; dont be tempted to blend in a food processor)
2. Strain out the pineapple juices.
3. Place pineapple pulp and half the sugar with whole spices in a large saucepan
4. Bring to a simmer over medium-high heat. Lower the heat to med-low to keep the simmer. Stir regularly to prevent burning. As the juice cooks off, slowly add the reserved juice a little at a time.
5. After about 1-1.5hours, the jam would have reduced to a sticky texture and caramelized. Remove spices. Add remaining sugar (or more to taste).
6. Continue cooking over med heat stirring constantly until pineapple jam is a dark amber colour
7. Let cool completely and refrigerate overnight
Matcha shortcrust dough
125 g soft unsalted butter, cut into cubes
150g flour
1 tbs matcha powder
50g icing sugar
1 egg yolk
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1. In a bowl of an electric mixer, blend together butter and sugar until creamy and smooth.
2. Sift together flour, icing sugar and matcha powder. Add dry ingredients to butter mixture and cream together until well-blended.
3. Add in egg yolk and vanilla, mixing just to blend. (Dont overwork the dough.)
4. Divide dough into 2 and wrap well in clingfilm. Refrigerate for 2 hours or overnight until firm.
Assembly:
Pineapple jam (enough jam to yield 4 batches of matcha shortcrust)
Matcha shortcrust dough
Preheat oven to 170C
1. Remove shortcrust dough from fridge and allow to rest for 10 min to soften.
2. Roll pineapple jam into balls of 6-7g each
3. Roll out the matcha dough with a rolling pin inbetween two pieces of clingfilm until about 0.5 cm thick.
4. Using a well-floured pineapple tart mould, cut out tart shapes and place on a baking tray lined with parchment paper.
5. Top the tarts with a ball of pineapple jam each
6. Bake at 170C for 20 min until firm and browned.
Never miss an opportunity to grab some pineapple. You will find plenty of these stalls along the Kandy road. If asked they also cut them in to slices and add the magical mix (a combination of salt+pepper), a must stop spot indeed.
The pineapple is a symbol of hospitality, friendship and warmth in the southern U.S. states and this fountain on the edge of the harbor in Charleston, SC is a beautiful monument to those ideals.
Just a random shot for today :)
But there is a story to be told...there is always a story to be told... :)
Dehydrated slice of pineapple - if you haven't tried them you should. The centre core (the bumpy bits) is just over 1 cm - this whole image was just about 3 cm wide. Shot using my 300 mm lens and extension tubes.
This pineapple is about the size of a quarter! It is growing on the porch outside my kitchen window and I have been admiring it for a few days, so I finally took the camera out to show you! The texture behind it is the screen from the porch.
The pineapple itself is a troubled icon, but I do like the bold colours in this one, something I normally shy away from. Definitely could do with being a little sharper, but as a way of rounding off my first roll of Portra, I still like the sense of fun/pop from this image.
Also known as Feijoa--a flowering plant in the Myrtle family.
It is native to Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, N. Argentina and Colombia.
The Pineapple Guava is not a true guava---it is an evergreen perennial shrub or small tree, ranging from 1-7 meters (3.3-23 feet) high, and cultivated as an ornamental and fruit tree. Their fruit is about the size of a chicken egg, and tasted like pineapple, apple, and mint. It closely resembles a guava, with a grittier texture, and ripens in Autumn.
(Wikipedia)
Florida Botanical Gardens
(Acca sellowiana)
This is a copyright photo. If you wish to purchase this photo or any other of my fine art prints, please visit my website at; www.jerryfornarotto.artistwebsites.com
The Pineapple Fountain is located in the Waterfront Park, Charleston, South Carolina.