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On a base of daikon radish, carrot, cucumber, and clingstone peach, I added pickled carrots, red seedless grapes, pickled scallions 荞头, candied kumquats, coriander, Kaffir lime leaves, and a dressing of plum sauce and light olive oil.
People of Elkhart Co. The Horticulturists Program on Sat. May 13, 2017. On Sat., May 13, 2017, Patrick McGuire of the Elkhart County Historical Museum told of the three local men of Elkhart County who contributed to the reputation of Elkhart County as one of the places where science and industry came together to develop horticulture businesses that were International. Dr. Orie J. Eigsti, a Goshen scientist invented the seedless watermelon in 1937, during a study for a gout drug, discovering that the drug caused watermelons to not produce most of their seeds. 85% of watermelons sold today are from his development. Vernon Krider,was helped by locals B.F. Cathcart and George Milburn of Bristol and opened his nursery in 1906. based on quality of soil and the ease of transport on the railroad to ship products to Chicago and to the East Coast. He was famous for mailing over 250,000 catalogs, his gardens in the 1933 Century of Progress Exhibition, and his Thornless Roses. His nursery business continued after his death by family until it closed in 1990. His granddaughter, Dian Krider WIlkey, attended the event. The Krider Memorial Garden is still open in Middlebury. A book on the Garden is available on Amazon. A.E. Kunderd of Goshen, originated the Ruffled and Laciniated Gladioli in 1912, had extensive gardens there and sent out 300,000 mail order catalogs at the height of his business, which faded in later years.
Hawaiian Name: 'Ulu
Breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis) is a species of flowering tree in the mulberry and jackfruit family (Moraceae) originating in the South Pacific and eventually spreading to the rest of Oceania.[2] British and French navigators introduced a few Polynesian seedless varieties to Caribbean islands during the late 18th century, and today it is grown in some 90 countries throughout South and Southeast Asia, the Pacific Ocean, the Caribbean, Central America and Africa.[3] Its name is derived from the texture of the moderately ripe fruit when cooked, similar to freshly baked bread and having a potato-like flavor.[3][4]
According to DNA fingerprinting studies, breadfruit has its origins in the region of Oceania from New Guinea through the Indo-Malayan Archipelago to western Micronesia.[5] The trees have been widely planted in tropical regions elsewhere, including lowland Central America, northern South America, and the Caribbean.[2][3] In addition to the fruit serving as a staple food in many cultures, the trees' light, sturdy timber has been used for outriggers, ships and houses in the tropics.
Because breadfruit dispersal across Oceania was dependent on human seafaring, botanical research has correlated with the human colonization of Oceania, resulting in a theory that humans brought breadfruit seeds from Melanesia to settle in Polynesia and Micronesia over thousands of years.[3][4]
Sir Joseph Banks and others saw the value of breadfruit as a highly productive food in 1769, when stationed in Tahiti as part of the Endeavour expedition commanded by Captain James Cook.[4][6] The late-18th-century quest for cheap, high-energy food sources for slaves in British colonies prompted colonial administrators and plantation owners to call for the plant to be brought to the Caribbean. As President of The Royal Society, Banks provided a cash bounty and gold medal for success in this endeavor, and successfully lobbied his friends in government and the Admiralty for a British Naval expedition. In 1787, William Bligh was appointed Captain of the HMS Bounty, and ordered to proceed to the South Pacific to collect the plants. In 1791, Bligh commanded a second expedition with the Providence and the Assistant, which collected seedless breadfruit plants in Tahiti and transported these to St. Helena, in the Atlantic, and St. Vincent and Jamaica in the West Indies.[3][4] Although Bligh won the Royal Society medal for his efforts, the introduction was not entirely successful, as most slaves refused to eat the new food.[7]
(From Wikipedia)
パンノキ(学名:Artocarpus altilis)は、クワ科の常緑高木。名称は、属名のギリシア語のパン(artos)と果実(karpos)からなる。
無核種はタネナシパンノキ(英Breadfruit tree)、有核種はタネパンノキ(英Bread-nut tree)、グアテマラではマサパン(マルチパン)と呼ばれる。
ポリネシア原産。木は高さ15mほどに成長し、葉は大きく7-9裂の掌状。雌雄異花。 葉が大きく、よく茂ることから、熱帯地方では日陰樹として公園や庭園、また街路樹として植えられる。18世紀末にイギリスのウィリアム・ブライによって、黒人奴隷の食料として西インド諸島に導入された。現在でもポリネシア諸国やハワイ、ジャマイカでは食されている。
果実はパンの実、またはブレッドフルーツとも呼ばれ、黄色~黄褐色で直径10-30cm。枝先に2-3個ずつ着生し、成木からは年間50-200個が得られる。
果肉にでんぷんを含み、蒸し焼きや丸焼き、あるいは薄切りにして焼いて食べられる。 また火で乾かしてビスケット状にし、貯蔵する。味は甘みの少ないサツマイモのようである。なお、果肉を葉で包んで土に埋め、発酵させてから食用にする処理方法もある。これによって長期保存が可能となる。
繁殖は種または分根により、定植後4-8年で結実する。
not nearly as fun as "rub hands, receive bacon"
Something to do with seedless watermelon levitation?
8 cups chunked seedless watermelon
½ cup freshly squeezed lime juice (about 3 limes)
2 Tbls sugar
¾ cup vodka
Fresh mint sprigs and triangle cut watermelon for garnish
Buddleia 'Ruby Chip' 23W28 Butterfly Bush T4- (Seedless) Butterfly Bush, Mature plant size: 3xft., Red, USDA Hardiness Zone 5, Michigan Bloom Month 7-10, In Garden Bed T4 for 67 DAYS (Bluestone). Planted in 2023.
Bluestone: Jaw-dropping color in a space-saving package! Neat habit and dozens of intense magenta flower spikes attract beneficial pollinators. Fragrant and long blooming. Buddleia Ruby Chip produces summer to frost vibrant color. Easily fits any landscape needs. Does not seed. Butterfly Bushes are quite drought tolerant once established. Proven Winners® selections are trialed and tested to be colorful, long blooming, carefree and easy to grow.
Photo by F.D.Richards, SE Michigan. Link to additional photos of this plant from 2023:
www.flickr.com/search/?user_id=50697352%40N00&sort=da...
#Michigan, #49236, #usdaZone6, #Shrub, #RubyChip, #Buddleia, #ButterflyBush, #23W28
Guava juice, black seedless grapes, chapatti and kurma, and a fine dish inspired by ratatouille recipe (prepared by yours truly).
seedless oranges: more independence: an old Tupperware orange peeler: a Daddy that doesn't have to be asked to get lunch on. . .
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Maturing sporangia on a Psilotum plant. You can also nicely see the dichotomous branching pattern on the stems. This type of branching pattern, and actually the entire plant with its lack of leaves and roots, look very similar to fossils of some of the earliest land plants. However, Psilotum is actually more closely related to ferns (they're also called Whisk Ferns) than to those extinct ancient plants. Its ancestors probably had leaves and have lost them at some point again. But if you were able to travel 400 million years back in time, some of the plants you would have found would have looked very similar to this one.
Maria é a principal variedade de uva de mesa sem sementes lançada pelo IAC - Instituto Agronômico de Campinas. Originalmente identificada como IAC 514-6, é resultado do cruzamento entre IAC 8-2 (Highland x Golden Queen) e Jumbo (Itália x Sultanina), realizado em 1953, por Santos Neto. Foto tirada no Vinhedo Extra Vitis, em Jundiaí (SP), por Fernando Picarelli Martins.
Students in Biology 111 (General Biology II) study nonvascular and seedless plants on Wednesday, March 8, 2017.