Knowledge

What alternate version of fruit are many people unaware of?

To all the Asians (or people) out there, you may have eaten a fruit called Lychee (or its scientific name: Litchi.)

(Yes, this sweet, juicy, exotic fruit.)

Back in January 2020 (yes, that recent), a farmer named Tibby Dixon in Australia has made his Lychee creation a success. He has grown his own Lychee tree for over 40 years.

After buying a single fruit Lychee tree from China for £2,600 (about $3,298.05 USD/ $4,430.23 CAD/ ₹249,985.32 Indian Rupee/$4,737.80 AUD), Mr. Dixon has been growing different Lychee varieties through mixed breeding and cross-pollination. Biology, buzz buzz!

And guess what? After 19 years of experimenting many Lychees, he has finally made a seedless Lychee creation!

In an ABC Australia interview,

[1] he describes his Lychee fruit, tasting:

“[…] like it has a bit of pineapple in it — that’s what my taste buds tell me.”

It is impressive to have seedless Lychee—that actually exist!

Super juicy, open the shell and there is no seed inside. I can taste the fruit and juice itself without the seed. One day, I want to visit that farm in Australia and try out the famous seedless Lychee.

The only downside is the no-seed Lychee is still in the early stages of development and is yet to be planted on commercial use.

Cheers


Fruits today actually look very different hundreds of years ago due to selective breeding. Bananas, for example, look like this today:

(Medical News Today)

Bananas today fit almost perfectly to the grip of the hand. It also has a hard part on the top that can be used to peel the skin off of the banana. Most varieties of bananas are big enough to fill us up with just one piece.

Modern bananas, however, came from two wild varieties, both of which look like this:

(Genetic Literacy Project)

These bananas have a lot of hard seeds, which means there’s less actual banana flesh to eat. Their skin is also considerably harder to peel. This type of banana, apparently, is not something people would want to eat. But due to breeding bananas with desirable traits (like lesser and smaller seeds and softer skins), we got to have the much more appetizing bananas we have today.

Another example is corn:

(Britannica)

Nice yellow cob, durable husk, sturdy stalks.

Back in 7,000 BC, however, natural corn looked like this:

(Living Crop Museum)

Corn today is 1,000 times bigger than this cute little whittle of a corn. Today’s corn is also sweeter, much easier to peel and grow. Corn thousand of years ago was also incredible dry and was almost inedible.

Related Posts

What’s it like inside an aircraft carrier during a heavy storm?

During my time on a carrier, we went through a hurricane not once, but twice. We were in the Atlantic returning to our home port but first, we…

If the Soviets had decided to push the Allies out of Western Europe at the end of WW2, could they have done it?

Stalin asked Marshal Zhukov that very question in 1945. His answer: No. Westerns have a myth about the Red Army being this enormous inexhaustible machine that steamrolled its…

How long can an Ohio-class submarine stay submerged?

The Ohio-class nuclear submarine was designed for extended strategic deterrent patrols. Each submarine is assigned two complete crews, called the Blue crew and the Gold crew, each typically serving…

Why is the F-35 terribly flawed but the F-22 wasn’t?

The F-35 has been clubbing F-15s, F-16s, F-18s, like baby seals in recent exercises. And In Red Flag 17–1 when the F-35 was declared out of weapons, the…

How large can an aircraft carrier be made to accommodate as many aircraft as possible?

HMS Habakukk was planned to be 2000′ long, 300′ wide, and able to carry 200 planes including heavy bombers! While it was theoretically possible to build it, the…

Which US Navy jet was the most difficult or the easiest to land on the Aircraft Carrier?

Most difficult or worst? Almost certainly the Voight F7U Cutlass. 25% of the production run was lost to landing accident. Carrier Captains started ordering them off their ships…