• @roostopher@lemmy.world
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    411 year ago

    Have you ever heard of a champagne mango? My wife and I had them when we toured a farm in Hawaii where their goal wasn’t actually to grow / sell fruit, but to replenish the nutrients in the soil that were wrecked by sugar cane plantations. Anyway, the guy pulls these mangoes straight off the tree and tells us they’re really fibrous so you can’t eat them like a regular mango, but you can mash it up in the skin then drink it like a juice box. He tossed me the one he was mashing up as a demo while explaining all this then told me to bite the top off and drink. As soon as my teeth broke the skin, juice started gushing out onto my shoes and the ground. The juice from that mango is easily like top 3 things I’ve ever eaten. Both the amount of flavor and the amount of juice that came from it were unbelievable.

  • Pons_Aelius
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    231 year ago

    None, I grew up with a mango tree in the backyard.

    It was heaven.

    • Blackout
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      41 year ago

      Mangos are the greatest. I’ve tried all the others, pathetic.

  • @RBWells@lemmy.world
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    121 year ago

    Where I live, we can get good mangoes, so they may win. But a good watermelon is my favorite fruit, and the occasional perfectly ripe apricot or peach I have tasted were both better than mango, they are just never ripe in the shops here, picked too early I think so they go straight from underripe and hard as rocks to mealy and unpleasant.

    • Rhynoplaz
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      91 year ago

      You can’t beat a good watermelon, but 75% of the watermelons I’ve had weren’t a good one, so they can be a bit of a gamble.

      • Golfnbrew
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        101 year ago

        Same with honeydew. Once you have a perfect one, 90% are so disappointing. But that perfect one… Oh my!

        • @RBWells@lemmy.world
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          11 year ago

          Yes a good honeydew melon earns its name! If you can smell them in the store they are usually good. Same with cantaloupe. If you can’t smell it don’t buy it.

      • @Grass@sh.itjust.works
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        11 year ago

        Some decades ago I bought Afghan watermelon seeds on a whim, wondering if it was notably different. Only 5 plants grew and only one viable fruit was produced. It was so unreasonably good and I had never previously enjoyed watermelon.

  • @TheBananaKing@lemmy.world
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    111 year ago

    Mangosteens. They are the Best Fruit.

    The ones you get here in Australia are golfball-sized and horribly expensive, but when I went to singapore they were huge and cheap.

  • Zathras
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    101 year ago

    Cantaloupe - when it’s not pre-cut with a possibility of salmonella

  • Skua
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    101 year ago

    Blackberries and strawberries! Although my tastes are likely coloured by the fact that I live in a place where few fresh fruits grow other than those, similar berries (yes, I know strawberries aren’t technically berries), and apples. So I like what is tastiest here. But I do really like them

    • @themusicman@lemmy.world
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      41 year ago

      Weird. To me blackberries and strawberries are the most likely to be either bland or overripe/rotten tasting. I would pick raspberries (and maybe blueberries) any day of the week

      • Skua
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        91 year ago

        I find that they do not store or travel well. Like a lot of fruit they’re enormously tastier when they’re in season and local

      • @garbagebagel@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        Depends where they’re grown I think. I can’t stand California strawberries but give me some fresh BC strawberries and I am in heaven. I’ve never liked blackberries though, despite them growing on like every street corner here.

  • @Pulptastic@midwest.social
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    91 year ago

    Pineapple. When I lived in Brazil I’d buy a fresh pineapple every week and it was heavenly. Easier to cut than a mango. The taste is debatable, I’d lean towards the tart tongue-dissolving pineapple, but hard to argue with the texture of a mango.

    • The Giant Korean
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      41 year ago

      I have a few trees. Can’t wait til they start bearing fruit!

      P.S. Assuming you’re talking about this and not papaya:

      • Lenny
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        31 year ago

        Same! I planted a lot of seeds around my yard thinking they’d somehow be hard to grow, and every single one of them germinated. I think I have like sixteen saplings (three of them are Peterson ones that we bought from a grafter).

      • @RBWells@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        Papaya still tastes like vomit to me, and just flat and sweet not balanced. I can’t imagine anyone arguing that it’s better than mango. Have not tried pawpaw yet.

  • OurTragicUniverse
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    71 year ago

    Than good mango, not many.

    Perfectly ripe and jammy persimmons are up there though.

    Super ripe and juicy yellow melon is an experience too. Especially when eaten straight out of the fridge on a hot summers day.

      • OurTragicUniverse
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        11 year ago

        I find grapes far too sweet these days. I tried variety box of them a few months back and none tasted fresh and tart how I remembered them from childhood.

  • @Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    71 year ago

    Apples. Locally grown, not flown across half the globe. And they come in all kinds of different flavors, some more sweet, some more sour, some mild.

    • @InvisibleShoe@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      True for most unless you have a mango tree growing in your yard. Then you have more mangos than you know what to do with. Kangaroos, cattle and horses like eating them though.

      • @Treczoks@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I don’t think a mango tree would copy with the climate here. And there is a severe lack of Kangaroos around this place, maybe except for a bunch in the zoo…