When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Lima bean - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lima_bean

    Sorting Phaseolus Names; Recording of a song called "Butter Beans" from the Florida Folklife Collection (made available for public use from the State Archives of Florida) USDA National Agricultural Library Lima Bean Digital Exhibit Archived 2021-09-20 at the Wayback Machine

  3. Annona - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Annona

    The generic name derives from anón, a Hispaniolan Taíno word for the fruit. [6] Paleoethnobotanical studies have dated Annona exploitation and cultivation in the Yautepec River region of Medicoto to approximately 1000 BC. [7] Plants of the genus have several common names, including sugar-apple, soursop, anona, chrimoya and guanabana.

  4. Spondias dulcis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spondias_dulcis

    Its oval fruits, 6–9 cm (2.4–3.5 in) long, are borne in bunches of 12 or more on a long stalk. Over several weeks, the fruit fall to the ground while still green and hard, then turn golden-yellow as they ripen. [1] According to Morton (1987), "some fruits in the South Sea Islands weigh over 500 g (1 lb) each." [1]

  5. Parkia speciosa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parkia_speciosa

    The petai tree can grow to about 30 metres. It bears flowers in a light bulb-shaped mass at the end of long stalks. The flowers secrete a nectar that attracts bats and other pollinators. The fruits emerge as long, twisted, translucent pods in a cluster of seven or eight pods. When those pods are mature, within them will reside the petai beans ...

  6. Byrsonima crassifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Byrsonima_crassifolia

    Byrsonima crassifolia is a slow-growing large shrub or tree to 10 metres (33 ft). Sometimes cultivated for its edible fruits, the tree is native and abundant in the wild, sometimes in extensive stands, in open pine forests and grassy savannas, from central Mexico, through Central America, to Colombia, Peru, Bolivia and Brazil; it also occurs in Trinidad, Barbados, Curaçao, St. Martin ...

  7. Alibertia patinoi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alibertia_patinoi

    Alibertia patinoi, commonly known as borojó, is a small (2-5m), dioecious tropical rainforest tree, one of the few edible fruit bearing species in the Rubiaceae family. . Borojó, native to the world's wettest lowlands (the Chocó–Darién moist forests ecoregion), grows in the Chocó Department of northwestern Colombia and in the Esmeraldas Province of northwestern Ec

  8. Artocarpus odoratissimus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artocarpus_odoratissimus

    Fruit and foliage Ripe fruits (Philippines) The appearance of the fruit can be regarded as an intermediate shape between the jackfruit and the breadfruit. It is round to oblong, 15–20 cm long and 13 cm broad, and weighing about 1 kg. The thick rind is covered with soft, broad spines. They become hard and brittle as the fruit matures.

  9. Pandanus tectorius - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandanus_tectorius

    Most varieties produce 8 to 12 fruits per tree every 2 years. [9] Each fruit usually weighs between 7 and 15 kg (15 and 33 lb) and contains 35 to 80 edible keys. [9] Pandanus tectorius plants are usually propagated by seed in Hawaii. [18] Soak the keys in cool tap water for 5 days while frequently changing the water. [25]