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Fruits

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Cherimoya, Persimmon, Ugli, Guava, Star fruit, and Mango Nutritional Value Two to Four servings each day Serving size is one medium size piece, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fruits


1
Fruits
  • Classification, nutrients, purchasing, preparing
    and storing

2
What are fruits
  • In botany, a fruit is the ripened ovarytogether
    with seedsof a flowering plant. Fruits are the
    means by which flowering plants disseminate seeds

3
  • In cuisine, when discussing fruit as food, the
    term usually refers to those plant fruits that
    are sweet and fleshy, examples of which include
    plums, apples and oranges. However, a great many
    common vegetables, as well as nuts and grains,
    are the fruit of that plant species.

4
BERRIES
  • Small juicy fruits with thin skins and tiny seeds
  • Grow on vines or bushes
  • Pick when fully ripen
  • Quality berries are plump, sweet, even colored

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6
DRUPES
  • Thin outer skin
  • Soft fleshy fruit
  • Fruit surrounds a single hard seed or pit
  • Can ripen after harvest
  • Grow on trees or vines

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8
POMES
  • Firm fruits with thin skin that grow on trees
  • Have a central core that is filled with seeds
  • Can be picked ripe or may ripen after being picked

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10
CITRUS FRUIT
  • Thick firm rind covered by a thin layer of
    colored skin called the zest.
  • The soft white layer between the zest and the
    flesh is called the pith.
  • The flesh is in segments separated by a thin
    membrane

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12
MELONS
  • Large, juicy fruit with thick rinds and many
    seeds in the center.
  • About 90 water
  • Grow on vines

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14
TROPICAL FRUITS
  • Grow in warm climates and are often considered
    exotic.

15
Cherimoya, Persimmon, Ugli, Guava, Star fruit,
and Mango
16
Nutritional Value
  • Two to Four servings each day
  • Serving size is one medium size piece, ½ cup
    chopped fruit or ¾ cup fruit juice
  • Citrus fruits provide high amounts of Vitamin C
  • Orange fruits (mango, cantaloupe, apricot)
    contain large quantities of beta carotene
    (Vitamin A)
  • Significant source of fiber
  • Contribute phytochemicals (antioxidants)

17
Available Forms
  • Canned
  • Frozen
  • Dried
  • Jams, jellies, preserves

18
Preparing fruit
  • Enzymatic browning many fruits exposed to air
    will turn brown (ex bananas, apples). Using
    lemon juice or acidulated water will help prevent
    this.
  • Fruits should be carefully washed before use.
    Fruit may be sprayed with insecticides or
    preservatives which can be harmful.
  • Peel or pare fruit to remove as little of flesh
    as possible, or wash well and eat the skin (extra
    fiber).

19
Methods of cooking
  • Cooking in liquid apple sauce, poached pears
  • Baking baked bananas, apples
  • Broiling bananas, grapefruit, pineapple
  • Frying apples, bananas

20
Purchasing and Storing
  • Buy fresh fruit, locally grown, in season
  • Fruit spoils rapidly, use quickly.
  • Ripen drupes (apricots, peaches, avocado) in
    brown paper bags
  • Refrigeration slows down spoilage
  • Check for bruises, cuts, mold and softness
  • Buy in small quantities, just what you need
  • Smell fruit, should be fragrant. Feel its
    weight, ripe fruit feels heavy. Check color
    green can indicate underripeness. Some fruits
    will be soft to the touch

21
Fruits you may not know
mangosteen
cherimoya
dragonfruit
Carambola (starfruit)
Rambutan
lychee
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