Uncommon Fruits
Garden and Yard Special
Fruit: rich, bloom dusted, melting, and luscious—
such are the treasures of orchard and garden..." wrote A.
J. Downing over a hundred years ago in The Fruit and
FruitTrees of North America . When you raise
your own fruit, not only can you harvest at the peak of
perfection, but you also can grow fruits not commonly found
in the markets. Persimmon, pawpaw, june berry, gooseberry,
and red currant are examples of uncommon, yet delectable
fruits. They also are easy to grow, requiring neither the
repeated spraying nor the skillful pruning demanded by
apples, peaches, and other familiar fruits.
Persimmon. The botanical name Diospyros
appropriately translates as "food of the gods." Persimmons
have a soft, smooth, jelly-like texture, a honey-like
sweetness. In appearance, the fruits resemble tomatoes,
cherry tomatoes in the case of our native American
persimmon and large tomatoes in the case of the oriental
persimmon. American persimmon fruits are slightly drier and
richer in flavor than those of the oriental persimmon, the
persimmon sometimes found in markets. American persimmon
trees also survive and ripen their fruits further north.
American persimmon is hardy to -25°F; oriental
persimmon to 0°F.
Persimmons are not widely known or grown for their fruits
because they are too soft for commercial shipping—not
a problem when you stand under your own tree and eat the
fruits—and because unripe fruits are astringent: but
who would eat an unripe peach?. Contrary to myth, frost is
not necessary to ripen a persimmon, just a sufficiently
long season. I garden near the northern limit of persimmon
growing, so I grow an early ripening variety of American
persimmon, such as Meader, Pieper, and Szukis.
Many oriental persimmons do not need cross-pollination;
most American persimmons do. Trees of both types usually
have either male or female flowers, so if pollination is
needed, you must plant both a male and a female tree. There
is no danger of spring frost snuffing out the crop, because
the blossoms open relatively late in the season.
A long taproot makes persim mons more dif ficult to
transplant than most other fruit trees. Therefore, plant in
spring and use either potted trees or bare root trees that
have been freshly dug.
Young persimmon trees grow fast, then settle down to a
moderate growth rate as fruiting begins, eventually
reaching a height of about fifty feet. Young trees need
training so each main branch has sufficient space to
develop, but once bearing has commenced, the trees
naturally drop some branches that have fruited, so are
somewhat self-pruning. (In the March, 1982 issue of MOTHER,
we reported that planting wild mint around our persimmon
trees was an unexpected companion-planting discov ery.
Pests seemed to head for the high road once the mint was
established around the base. Our only dilemma was, and is,
keeping the mint from taking over the surrounding area once
we planted it. It's a ferocious spreader, but a ring of
rocks at the desired boundary seems to do the trick.)
P awpaw. I like to tell people that I have banana trees
growing in my backyard, even though winter temperatures
plummet to -30°F here. The trees are actually pawpaws,
but they have been known as Hoosier or Michigan
bananas—the tree is native to most of eastern
U.S.—because the fruits have a taste and texture
somewhat like a banana, with additional flavor hints of
vanilla custard, pineapple, and mango. The fruits ripen in
late summer or early fall.
Like persimmon, pawpaw has a long taproot, and must be
transplanted similarly. Plant two pawpaws, because the
lurid, purple flowers need cross pollination in order to
set fruit. The trees need little pruning, only enough to
remove dead or interfering branches and to stimulate some
new growth each year.
Gooseberry and Red Currant. These are
fruits that Europeans rave about, but which are practically
unknown in America. This is not surprising since mostly
inferior gooseberry varieties are sold here, and the fruits
usually are picked unripe for cooking.
But pop a fresh, ripe Whitesmith, Hinnonmakis Yellow, or
Achilles gooseberry into your mouth and you will taste why
the best gooseberries have been compared to the best grapes
in flavor. In seventeenth-century England, gooseberries
were even raised commercially for fermenting into wine.
Among the varieties in my garden are gooseberries that are
green, white, yellow, red, and purple, with some fruits as
large as small plums.
Red currants are known mostly for the beautiful jelly they
make, but I let mine hang on the bushes until they are dead
ripe and then eat them right out in the garden. The fresh
flavor is admittedly sprightly, but this is welcome during
the hot summer days during which currants ripen.
Red currants and gooseberries are borne on bushes growing
three feet high and wide. These are plants of the north:
they thrive where winter cold drops to —40°F but
languish in the hot summers of the South. For best
production, gooseberry and red currant bushes need annual
pruning. Each winter, I cut away at their bases any
branches older than four years old and all but a half-dozen
or so of the newest shoots growing up from ground level.
One shortcoming of the gooseberry is its stout thorns,
which necessitate picking fruits with at least one hand
gloved.
Juneberry. These fruits are blueberry-sized and dark blue,
so comparisons with blueberries seem unavoidable. In fact,
juneberries are juicy and sweet, with their own distinctive
flavor that is a bit almondy.
Also in contrast to blueberries, juneberries are not at C4
all finicky about soil and will I grow where winter lows
dip even to -40°f . There are many edible species of
juneber ry, so you can grow a plant the size of a low
shrub, a large shrub, or a small tree. Bus Bushy
juneberries benefit from annual winter pruning, but regular
pruning is not re quired for the tree forms. Unfortunately
juneberries are as popular with the birds as blueberries.
Guess what month the fruits ripen?
Hardy Kiwi. This fruit has the same sparkling, emerald
flesh as market kiwis (a relative), and the same
flavor—a savory mix of acidity and sweetness akin to
a dead-ripe pineapple. But hardy kiwis are the size of
grapes and have tender, smooth. It green skins and so can
be eaten whole, just like grapes. As implied by the name,
hardy kiwis laugh off cold, down to -30°F; market kiwis
tolerate only 0°. Fruits ripen in late summer and early
fall.
The plant is a vigorous twining vine that needs a pergola
or trellis over which to clamber. Allow 150 square feet per
plant. Prune the plants each year as you would grapes. A
more casual approach to pruning, with some sacrifice in
production, is to just lop back unruly branches.
Plants are either male or female, so to get fruit from a
female vine, you must also plant a male vine. This one male
can pollinate up to eight females. Some varieties such as
Issai do not need pollination. Young plants are less
cold-tolerant than mature plants, and sometimes are nipped
back to the ground unless protected with a wrapping of
burlap or straw.
Although persimmon, pawpaw, juneberry, gooseberry, and red
currant hail from the four corners of the world, none is
especially finicky as to site. The only condition all these
plants ador is waterlogged soil. Otherwise, any reasonably
fertile soil in full sun or even part shade will do. Since
these plants also are native to woodlands or cold climates,
they all also enjoy the cool, moist soil beneath a thick
mulch of leaves or straw.
Delicious and Beautiful
Many "uncommon" fruits are overlooked because they are
borne on ornamental trees, shrubs, and vines. Most
varieties of juneberry, for example, have been chosen for
their white or pink tinged flowers, or the fiery autumn
show of their leaves.
Hardy kiwis are attractive plants that have clothed
pergolas (see "MOTHER' Rustic Pergola" on page 62) on old
estates since the turn of the century-how many visitors
have passed beneath these pergolas, unaware of the
delicious fruits hidden among the leaves? Persimmons and
pawpaws have drooping leaves that give the trees a soft,
languid appearance in summer, livened in fall as the leaves
turn a clear yellow color. Even the bark of persimmon has a
pretty checked pattern.
Other plants with ornamental qualities and tasty fruits
include: cornelian cherry, a small tree clothed with yellow
blossoms in early spring; maypop, an herbaceous vine with
large, intricate, breathtaking flowers; lowbush blueberry,
a ground hugging shrub with nodding white blossoms in
spring, leaves that turn crimson in autumn, and stems that
remain reddish through winter.