Horticulture

The Plentiful Persimmon

I became such a big fan of persimmons. They kind of crept up on me. In my family, persimmons used to be just a post–Thanksgiving and Christmas dinner treat mixed in the fruit basket along with pears, pomegranates, big navel oranges and grapes. My siblings were (and still are) fussy eaters, and they did not like the soft texture, but my mom and I loved the sweet taste and beautiful pumpkin-orange color. We used to cut the persimmons into soft chunks if they were firm enough or scrape the more ripened fruit into a custard dish to be eaten with a spoon. When I was at an Army post in Missouri I saw smaller native American persimmons growing wild “in the field,” and locals showed me how to pick and eat them after the first snowfall when they were sometimes semi-frozen. These so-called Ozark plums were to me like nature’s popsicles, and as I munched them they reminded me

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Horticulture

Horticulture3 min read
Flying Colors
Here are some top performers from just a few of the plant evaluations led by Richard Hawke over the past three decades, as he described them in each trial’s Plant Evaluation Notes, which can all be viewed in full at www.chicagobotanic.org/collections
Horticulture4 min read
Succeed With Succession
BY JULY many of the early-planted vegetables in my garden are finished and it’s time to get serious about succession planting. Once a crop like spring turnips or snap peas has finished, I tidy up the bed, amend the soil with a thin layer of compost a
Horticulture2 min read
The Garden Center’s Grip
SOMETHING WEIRD HAPPENS when gardeners enter a garden center. We change. Suddenly, somehow, we’re overcome with this vague yet powerful, transcendental feeling of liberation, and we become aware of money we probably have and hopefully won’t otherwise

Related Books & Audiobooks