I daresay Mini-Me would be delighted with a new miniature melon that's coming onto the market in England.
Measuring about an inch from tip-to-tip, it is 20 times smaller than its traditional cousin, but with an almost identical skin colouring.
Worry not. It is not part of some vile Frankenstein Food experiment, but is 100 per cent natural.
A wild fruit, the Pepquino was discovered by Dutch food producers in South America who brought it to the Netherlands and cultivated it in greenhouses.
While it resembles larger varieties, it has a fresh crisp taste similar to a cucumber and juicy light green flesh.
For those wondering how on earth you scoop the fruit out, there is instant reassurance - the skin is soft and edible. Even better, the pips are edible too. Producers Koppert Cress say it can be eaten as a snack or appetiser, like the olive, in a summer salad, stir fried or made into a sorbet and teamed with dark chocolate.
They are confident that, with its distinctive appearance and slightly sour taste, it will become the fashionable food of 2009.
Prices start at £10 per 250g box [just over US $15 for just under 9 ounces], which contains around 50 melons.
There's more at the link.
I find the price ridiculously high (round here, $15 will buy you several full-size watermelons, weighing a darn sight more than 9 ounces each!), but there's the novelty value, I guess. Still, I'd like to see the reaction of our local roadside watermelon vendors if I walked up and showed them one of these things, and told them the price. The expression on their faces should be worth photographing!
Peter
1 comment:
I agree with you about the price. When they become available from seed, though, I won't mind trying them in the garden.
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