Stay tuned,
Eric
Soursop, Guanabana (Annona muricata)
This tree is just a baby like most things in my relatively new yard. It's already producing though.
The only set back is if it gets below 40f it loses all it's leaves below 30f it'll die right to the ground.
This tropical tree is a small evergreen, up to 15 to 20 feet, with leathery, obovate leaves, native to tropical America. Fruits are very large, up to 5 pounds, and heart shaped, dark green in color. The skin is glabrous, but bears numerous fleshy spines. The interior flesh is white, with soft, cottony strands that contain many seeds. Flesh is tart, desirable for ices and ade drinks. It is an important fruit in Puerto Rico and other tropical American areas. It is too tender for culture in continental U.S., except in the warmest parts of Florida.
Sugar Apple, Sweetsop (Annona squamosa)
It is a semi-evergreen shrub or small tree reaching 6-8 m tall. The leaves are alternate, simple, oblong-lanceolate, 5-17 cm long and 2-5 cm broad. The flowers are produced in clusters of 3-4, each flower 1.5-3 cm across, with six petals, yellow-green spotted purple at the base.
The fruit is usually round, slightly pine cone-like, 6-10 cm diameter and weighing 100-230 g, with a scaly or lumpy skin. There are variations in shape and size. The fruit flesh is edible, white to light yellow, and resembles and tastes like custard. The edible portion coats the seeds generously; a bit like the gooey portion of a tomato seed. Sugar-apple has a very distinct, sweet-smelling fragrance. The texture of the flesh that coats the seeds is a bit like the center of a very ripe guava (excluding the seeds). It is slightly grainy, a bit slippery, very sweet and very soft. The seeds are scattered through the fruit flesh; the seed coats are blackish-brown, 12-18 mm long, and hard and shiny.
Passion Fruit (Passiflora edulis)
The vine I have is a cultivar called 'Bountiful' as you can see it's living up to it's name. I love passion fruit eaten out of hand, but after a hundred or so fruits. I'm a little burnt-out!!!
The fruits, native to tropical America, are produced on evergreen vines which are tender and require frost-free areas. Vines are trained on trellises similar to grapes and pruned annually either to stubs or canes. Leaves are large and three-lobed. Fruits are generally globose in shape, purple or yellow in color, about two inches diameter. They have a tough outer skin which encloses a mass of seeds, each imbedded in a juicy pulp, the edible portion.
Passion Flower flowers are produced on new growth, and ripe fruits and flowers may be on the plants at the same time.
Mango (Mangifera indica) 'Julie'
Mango (Mangifera indica) 'Neelum'
I planted this tree two years ago and I already have fruit! Ok, so it was only two fruits this year, but they were delicious. This tree has small yellow-orange fruit. Which is better when you finish ripening inside. It's has a unique taste combining mango, coconut, and spices.
Charichuelo (Garcinia madruno)
Pitomba (Eugenia luschnathiana)
Pineapple (Ananas comosus)
Meyer Lemon (Citrus × meyeri)
Is a small citrus fruit tree, native to China, thought to be a cross between a true lemon and a mandarin orange or sweet orange. The Meyer lemon was introduced to the United States in 1908 as S.P.I. #23028, by the agricultural explorer Frank Meyer, an employee of the United States Department of Agriculture who collected a sample of the plant on a trip to China.
Banana (Musa sp.)
update 12-12-2008
I have since discussed these fruits in further detail and others as well. You can see these post here http://ilikerareplants.blogspot.com/search/label/tropicalfruits
Enjoy,
Eric
Tropical Fruits by Eric Bronson is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License.
Based on a work at www.flickr.com