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31 votes
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Nikola Tesla's weird eating habits
10 votes -
100% apple. This apple pie contains only apples.
29 votes -
How Honeycrisp apples went from marvel to mediocre
42 votes -
Gene-edited non-browning banana could cut food waste
24 votes -
The incredible white mango of Borneo - Wani | Weird Fruit Explorer
7 votes -
The history and economics of frozen orange juice
9 votes -
The history of slipping on banana peels | Pretty Good, episode 14
7 votes -
The banana apocalypse is coming. Can we stop it this time?
25 votes -
Orange juice crisis hits consumers in Japan
14 votes -
Banana giant corporation Chiquita held liable by US court for funding paramilitaries
38 votes -
Elephant Apple - Elephants love this fruit and I do too | Weird Fruit Explorer
6 votes -
Wood apple - I finally found a good one and it tastes... special | Weird Fruit Explorer
13 votes -
How to get the most flavor when juicing a lemon
16 votes -
The lime crisis: Why ceviche has become a luxury for Peruvians
13 votes -
It's not Dragon Fruit, it's Peruvian Apple Cactus | Weird Fruit Explorer
18 votes -
Don't make hummus at home, make msabbaha instead
22 votes -
The idea of seasonal eating reaches its apotheosis in Sweden on Midsummer Eve, a magical day of feasting where a cake layered with strawberries and cream is the crowning glory
13 votes -
When life doesn't give you lemons (three sour Costa Rican citruses) | Weird Fruit Explorer
2 votes -
Do your lime trees produce much fruit?
2 years ago we planted a lime tree in our backyard. It was already about 5-6 feet tall when we planted it. There's a lemon tree next to it that is probably 50 years old and produces more fruit...
2 years ago we planted a lime tree in our backyard. It was already about 5-6 feet tall when we planted it. There's a lemon tree next to it that is probably 50 years old and produces more fruit than we can use. We're constantly giving away lemons to our friends and neighbors, baking stuff with the ones we keep and we still too many left! But our lime tree barely produces anything. The first year it produced 3 limes, all of which were hard and almost juiceless. This year, so far it has produced a single fruit which doesn't yet look ripe. The thing is that it produces tons of buds that look like they're going to become limes, but they either die or are eaten by squirrels, I guess. I've heard a similar story from a coworker about her lime tree. Is there any secret to getting a lime tree to produce fruit?
10 votes -
Glazed lemon cookies
6 votes -
Nearly 11,000,000 kilograms of strawberries might get thrown in the trash in California each week due to weakened demand caused by coronavirus
9 votes -
The age of robot farmers - Picking strawberries takes speed, stamina, and skill. Can a robot do it?
14 votes -
Six strawberry brands linked to needle contamination across Australian east coast, authorities say
Six strawberry brands linked to needle contamination across east coast, authorities say Strawberry contamination prompts $100,000 reward in search for culprit
5 votes -
The big squeeze: Sicily’s mafia sprang from the growing global market for lemons – a tale with sour parallels for consumers today
8 votes -
Top ten worst fruit in the world
15 votes -
Dragons made of citrus: Every year, the town of Menton, France, turns lemons and oranges into giant sculptures depicting windmills, dragons, and more
6 votes