Put them in a brown paper bag to ripen. If you put a small bit of an apple in there, that helps. Close the bag. I use a binder clip after folding it over a couple of times.
The seeds germinate very easily, and if you put them in a 5-gallon pot you will probably have a 3 to 4 ft tall tree and fruit in about 3 years. Next time you try the fruit, put the whole fruit in your mouth, eat the red part off and spit out the seed. Nibbling at it might let the flavor/aroma Escape.
I love this series! Emmy, my introduction to you was a single Fruity Fruits episode, followed by binging on all the other episodes, and then watching your other content. I think I became a subscriber by that second episode.
Another fruit you might like to try is Northern Spicebush Berry (Lindera benzoin). I like mixing it with more bland fruit jams to give it an allspice taste. The leaves are also supposedly good as a tea.
I've looked into growing this in my backyard out of sheer exoticness but never been too impressed with the reviews. Yours seems similar to others. Thanks for sharing.
This might sound weird, but is Emmy’s voice a higher pitch in this video? I even checked if I accidentally had the video on 1.5 or something. Then when it got to the end where she was filming on a different day, her voice sounded normal again. Am I going crazy?
Awwww EMMY! For whatever reason I haven't connected with your videos in a long while. It gave me a much needed mood boost, to see your lovely face again 😊.
@emmymade Maybe they call it peanut "butter" because it's a smooshy paste and spreads instead of naming it after "peanut butter" ? In South America things translate differently?
I have many of these little trees in my Florida garden. They germinate all by themselves, and will produce fruit in the partial shade of my mango and avocado trees. When I first tasted them I thought they tasted a lot like peanut butter, but the more I've eaten, the less I think I think it taste like peanut butter. I like them and so do the birds, but the fruits don't usually ripen at the same time even in a single bunch. They are continuously blooming and developing fruit throughout much of the year, I get only a few a day in season. I didn't know they could be picked orange for later bird-free eating, so thanks to you and Miami Fruit for that info. Sometimes the fruits ferment on the tree, and I like those the best.
I've actually noticed her voice changes from video to video. Sometimes it's much higher sometimes it's much lower. It's definitely higher than usual in this video.
I’m behind on videos and the difference is really obvious after binging her videos 😂 I think this video might be sped up a tiny bit because her cadence is also a little different!
Emmy, I'd be very interested in learning more about boiled peanuts and perhaps a recipe video? You reminded me of a foggy memory from a family vacation when I was a child!
You should do an apple competition with multiple types of apples to see which one is best! Obviously everyone has different preferences, but it is fun to try out new varieties to see how they compare.
As a North Carolinalin I can verify the magic of boiled peanuts. I’d describe them as having the texture of garbanzo beans. I ❤ boiled peanuts and often freeze batches. Instead of boiling them for hours and hours, I have used my Pressure Cooker/Instapot and made them in a fraction of the time. The secret is how salty you get them. We also refer to them as green peanuts…..
@@rebekah1111 I don’t remember but I googled it I think I cooked a small amount to see how it worked out and the salt ratio. I adjusted the salt and water levels for the next batches. It knocked out a lot of the time versus the pot/stove, plus I didn’t have to stand and watch a pot.
I used to live in Summerville, SC and would go to the farmers market and buy boiled peanuts. In Charleston, we had Tony the Peanut man. I miss “fresh” boiled peanuts. People who have only tried canned are missing out on so much,
ooh these sound delicious! i absolutely love boiled peanuts. i wonder if a jam made from this fruit would be more like peanut butter? though i feel like it might be more like ube jam
It looks like a mini persimmon when you open it. Happy you tried it and shared with us! Thanks! Can you try to overripe a couple of them to see if they change?
Ooh you should try (if you haven’t already!) milk fruit and abiu (pouteria caimito). The inside textures are similar to me, almost like a persimmon mangosteen mix. Flavor of both is great, but def worth trying both! Most sources say they’re found in Latin American regions, but I had both in Taiwan!
Not sure if you're familiar with 'Weird Explorer's' channel, but the host goes around the world trying strange fruits and it's so interesting to watch...just like your vids!!! Keep shining, cheers
The way the tree grows and the two fruiting seasons reminds me of my miracle fruit, they are a small tree/shrub, takes 3 years or so to start producing fruit, and have two fruiting seasons
Take a darkish towel and place it on the counter put the fruit on it and fold the other half of the towel over the fruit. Helps ripen faster and more consistently
I have 3 PB fruit plants, all flower throughout the year but don't bear fruit often and only a few as they are difficult to pollinate (even by hand). If you let the fruit ripen on the branch, it will be sweet and pulpy, almost like peanut butter.
Grown as a decorative landscaping plant; leaves are famous for having holes in them. Fruit looks like 🌽&🍌 had a baby with a snake as it's covered in hexagonal scales. Can only be eaten when completely ripe; the unripe fruit contains unpleasant levels of oxalic acid. It'll make your mouth dry & astringent if you eat it then. Place in a paper bag on the counter & only eat the portions of the fruit where the scales begin to come off naturally & the flesh is soft like a 🍌. Is very "tropical", like a combination of 🍌&🍍. Even here in South Florida they're hard to find.
I have garden huckleberry, which is a species of black nightshade from Africa that I grow and make pies and cobbler out of. The fruit is frozen, but I'd be happy to send you some to try.
There’s some wonderful Australian native fruits. Finger lime is my absolute favourite. Davidson plum is also nice. But there’s lots of different ones to try.
Have you ever tried loquats? We had a tree in our garden in Johannesburg when I was a child, but I have never seen them sold anywhere. They have a very distinctive taste.
That is so interesting. I'd been debating if I wanted to get a PB plant for my backyard garden. I'm not the biggest fan of boiled peanuts, but my father LOVES them, so maybe I will give this a try ❤
What is that word or phrase you always say before tasting? The nearest I could find in a search engine is "itadakimasu," which is colloquially rendered, "I humbly receive this food." But I only hear three, rather than six syllables, something like "ita-aki-mas." Are there regional variants of the word?
Is it anything like persimmons? Looks like a mini version to me, on the inside too. And you describe the texture as sweet potato and as mushy/sticky. That sounds like ripe persimmons.
Have you ever tried a pawpaw? I had the opportunity to try one the other day. It's the largest tree-borne fruit native to the contiguous US, a close relative of the cherimoya, but many people have never heard of it because it's not well suited for commercial cultivation and thus is generally not available to consumers.
@@AnNguyen-zt1oz Every year in late autumn, there are paw paw festivals. Find one near you. There are many paw paw varieties and they all taste different. I have 2 trees in my urban yard and my pawpaws taste different year to year. They're a cool fruit. Worth growing. Pretty trees.
@@bjdefilippo447 Some pawpaw varieties are funky but you won't find pawpaws in grocery stores, you either need to forage or grow your own. The fruit doesn't stay fresh very long after harvest and it bruises easily. Worth growing a couple trees though.
I wonder since these are reminiscent of boiled peanuts could these be dehydrated or roasted and turned into a kind of butter for people with peanut allergies i personally myself don't have a peanut allergy but I'd imagine dehydrating them may make the flavor stronger if it works it would be a great alternative
Whenever I’m at Epcot at Walt Disney World, I see the peanut butter fruit plant in the greenhouses of the Living With the Land attraction. As peanut butter is my favorite food, I’m fascinated by this fruit. I’ve never had the opportunity to try it, though. Sounds like I’m not really missing out. I suppose I could grow the plant here in Central Texas where it’s hot most of the year, but I’m not a gardener at all so I’d probably fail at it. I’ll stick to actual peanut butter.
I think that the Peanut part of the name refers to the nutty flavor, and the Butter part of the name refers to the sticky, pasty texture. Just a random thought
Your ability to describe how food tastes in such a vivid and provocative way will never cease to amaze me! Thank you for sharing your talents with us.
Love the fruity-fruits intro comeback!
Put them in a brown paper bag to ripen. If you put a small bit of an apple in there, that helps. Close the bag. I use a binder clip after folding it over a couple of times.
The seeds germinate very easily, and if you put them in a 5-gallon pot you will probably have a 3 to 4 ft tall tree and fruit in about 3 years. Next time you try the fruit, put the whole fruit in your mouth, eat the red part off and spit out the seed. Nibbling at it might let the flavor/aroma Escape.
Looks like the pasty/sticky texture of a Persimmon!
Good tip!
Do you wait for the fruit to be red ripe to collect the seeds?
@@dogday283Seeds should be sowed immediately as they become less viable over time very fast.
I love this series! Emmy, my introduction to you was a single Fruity Fruits episode, followed by binging on all the other episodes, and then watching your other content. I think I became a subscriber by that second episode.
Another fruit you might like to try is Northern Spicebush Berry (Lindera benzoin). I like mixing it with more bland fruit jams to give it an allspice taste. The leaves are also supposedly good as a tea.
Watching your studio become lived in and gain character has been nice.
I have several of these trees in my yard and I love it. You just got to get the fruit off before the birds eat them up
Funny but true!
Is this okay to eat a lot in one time?
@@cyrilsomaweera6897 I don't see why not
Salmon berries!! They are a sweet berry that look a lot like raspberries in shape but are the color of salmon roe. Definite must try!!
Oh oh i got these last year. can not wait to try the fruit>>>
Whenever my 1 year old sees me watching TH-cam she says "Emmy, Emmy." She's a fan.
🧡🧡🧡🧡🧡
Oh how i missed this series. You taught me about so many fruits and food’s growing up ❤ thank youu
I've looked into growing this in my backyard out of sheer exoticness but never been too impressed with the reviews. Yours seems similar to others. Thanks for sharing.
Arnold voice "it's not a tuber"
This might sound weird, but is Emmy’s voice a higher pitch in this video? I even checked if I accidentally had the video on 1.5 or something. Then when it got to the end where she was filming on a different day, her voice sounded normal again. Am I going crazy?
Awwww EMMY! For whatever reason I haven't connected with your videos in a long while. It gave me a much needed mood boost, to see your lovely face again 😊.
Fruity Fruits returns! Love that jingle!
@emmymade Maybe they call it peanut "butter" because it's a smooshy paste and spreads instead of naming it after "peanut butter" ? In South America things translate differently?
I have many of these little trees in my Florida garden. They germinate all by themselves, and will produce fruit in the partial shade of my mango and avocado trees. When I first tasted them I thought they tasted a lot like peanut butter, but the more I've eaten, the less I think I think it taste like peanut butter. I like them and so do the birds, but the fruits don't usually ripen at the same time even in a single bunch. They are continuously blooming and developing fruit throughout much of the year, I get only a few a day in season. I didn't know they could be picked orange for later bird-free eating, so thanks to you and Miami Fruit for that info. Sometimes the fruits ferment on the tree, and I like those the best.
Have you ever had loquats? We had a loquat tree where I lived in CA. I loved em!
Am I tripping or is Emmy's voice higher than usual 😅 mine does that when I'm excited
I thought I was the only one! I had to go back to another video to see if I was imagining it! There must be something up with the audio?
She sounds like a grammar school aged
I've actually noticed her voice changes from video to video. Sometimes it's much higher sometimes it's much lower. It's definitely higher than usual in this video.
I’m behind on videos and the difference is really obvious after binging her videos 😂 I think this video might be sped up a tiny bit because her cadence is also a little different!
So excited to see a new Fruity Fruits episode! Missed hearing you say “fruits that are fruity!”
I'm growing this fruit. Planted right next to my blackberry jam fruit. 😂 because I have a sense of humor 🤷🏽♀️🇵🇷
Emmy, I'd be very interested in learning more about boiled peanuts and perhaps a recipe video? You reminded me of a foggy memory from a family vacation when I was a child!
I've been growing one for the last 3 years and it finally is getting fruits!! So excited!
I think after waiting a year for anything, it will never meet expectations!
Emmy's voice seems super high pitch in this video.
plz do more fruity fruit videos, it's my favorite thing you do!
You should do an apple competition with multiple types of apples to see which one is best! Obviously everyone has different preferences, but it is fun to try out new varieties to see how they compare.
As a North Carolinalin I can verify the magic of boiled peanuts. I’d describe them as having the texture of garbanzo beans. I ❤ boiled peanuts and often freeze batches. Instead of boiling them for hours and hours, I have used my Pressure Cooker/Instapot and made them in a fraction of the time. The secret is how salty you get them. We also refer to them as green peanuts…..
I made some in my crockpot. They are delicious and addictive. Thumbs up!!
I’ve only ever done them in a pot on the stove. What settings do you use on the pressure cooker?
@@rebekah1111 I don’t remember but I googled it I think I cooked a small amount to see how it worked out and the salt ratio. I adjusted the salt and water levels for the next batches. It knocked out a lot of the time versus the pot/stove, plus I didn’t have to stand and watch a pot.
I used to live in Summerville, SC and would go to the farmers market and buy boiled peanuts. In Charleston, we had Tony the Peanut man. I miss “fresh” boiled peanuts. People who have only tried canned are missing out on so much,
Boil them with salt and 5 spice powder. Delicious.
ooh these sound delicious! i absolutely love boiled peanuts. i wonder if a jam made from this fruit would be more like peanut butter? though i feel like it might be more like ube jam
Boiled peanuts? How do u make them? Are they sweet or salty or what?
It looks like a mini persimmon when you open it. Happy you tried it and shared with us! Thanks!
Can you try to overripe a couple of them to see if they change?
I thought about persimmon too!😊
No, it looks a females Vulva.
They don't look like persimmons at all and i've had MANYYYYYY ..
@@X22GJP😐
That's my impression from the video when she cuts one in half.@@mariapriest4106
Ooh you should try (if you haven’t already!) milk fruit and abiu (pouteria caimito). The inside textures are similar to me, almost like a persimmon mangosteen mix. Flavor of both is great, but def worth trying both! Most sources say they’re found in Latin American regions, but I had both in Taiwan!
Heeey Emmy, have you tried Níspero fruit? Also, Chirimoya?
Maybe you should try *roasting* the fruits to see if that changes the flavor! 😊
Been a while since a Fruity Fruit episode!
Heya Emmy! Have you ever tried to plant any of the other seeds of these fabulous exotic fruits that you try? :)
Not sure if you're familiar with 'Weird Explorer's' channel, but the host goes around the world trying strange fruits and it's so interesting to watch...just like your vids!!! Keep shining, cheers
Love them both, and I'm using them as inspiration for my own channel
Love that channel!
You should try the chocolate mint plant Emmy.
The way the tree grows and the two fruiting seasons reminds me of my miracle fruit, they are a small tree/shrub, takes 3 years or so to start producing fruit, and have two fruiting seasons
I have a miracle fruit shrub too. Miracle fruit and lemon is amazing. Tastes like the sweetest lemonade ever!
@@onmywayto8083 try a lime!
Take a darkish towel and place it on the counter put the fruit on it and fold the other half of the towel over the fruit. Helps ripen faster and more consistently
I love fruity fruits. These are known to be like sweet potatoes. Texture and taste.
I have 3 PB fruit plants, all flower throughout the year but don't bear fruit often and only a few as they are difficult to pollinate (even by hand). If you let the fruit ripen on the branch, it will be sweet and pulpy, almost like peanut butter.
Yes this New England weather is crazy
Apparently it grows in Venezuela. I've never seen it, I googled it and apparently it's known as "ciruela de monte" (bush plum).
I screamed, “EAT IT!!!” for 4 1/2 minutes.
Woah! Excited to see you try another uncommon fruit. Love your respect for food
fruity fruits is my favorite series of yours. please try serviceberries if you never have!
Whoa! A hundred bucks for a bowl of fruit?! Yeah, screw that. I'll just stick to actual peanut butter.
Always love your videos!
my favorite part of the fruity fruit videos is definitely the intro song I do a little dance every time
I love the fruity fruits theme song.🎶😊
Me too!
Emmy, have you heard of the monstera fruit? It looks like corn but is supposed to taste like a fruit salad.
That sounds interesting
Dangerous fruit to eat. If you eat it underripe it can really mess up your mouth and throat
Grown as a decorative landscaping plant; leaves are famous for having holes in them. Fruit looks like 🌽&🍌 had a baby with a snake as it's covered in hexagonal scales. Can only be eaten when completely ripe; the unripe fruit contains unpleasant levels of oxalic acid. It'll make your mouth dry & astringent if you eat it then. Place in a paper bag on the counter & only eat the portions of the fruit where the scales begin to come off naturally & the flesh is soft like a 🍌. Is very "tropical", like a combination of 🍌&🍍. Even here in South Florida they're hard to find.
4:26 is extreme Kombucha girl energy lol
These have resemblance of chontaduro (peach plum) also grown in South America. Taste great with a little salt
When you think that commercial peanut butter has added salt, and many have added sugar, I doubt any fruit could taste like it. Boiled peanuts, sure.
I have garden huckleberry, which is a species of black nightshade from Africa that I grow and make pies and cobbler out of. The fruit is frozen, but I'd be happy to send you some to try.
Could you imagine a PBJ with a jelly made with those
There’s some wonderful Australian native fruits. Finger lime is my absolute favourite. Davidson plum is also nice. But there’s lots of different ones to try.
I would love to taste that as a jam!
I live in Georgia (the state) and yes boiled peanuts are everywhere here. I like the cajun ones.
A FRUITY FRUITS VIDEO?! 🤩🤩🤩 these are my absolute favorite!!
Have you ever tried loquats? We had a tree in our garden in Johannesburg when I was a child, but I have never seen them sold anywhere. They have a very distinctive taste.
Cloudberries, loganberries and salmonberries are some fruits you may want to try if you haven’t before. Thanks, Emmy! 💜
I love the fruity fruit song
Interesting find! I wonder if these would make a good jam? 🤔
“Eating goober peas.” :P
That is so interesting. I'd been debating if I wanted to get a PB plant for my backyard garden. I'm not the biggest fan of boiled peanuts, but my father LOVES them, so maybe I will give this a try ❤
I'm excited to see Fruity Fruits I have watched the others, great fun !!!💙
What is that word or phrase you always say before tasting? The nearest I could find in a search engine is "itadakimasu," which is colloquially rendered, "I humbly receive this food." But I only hear three, rather than six syllables, something like "ita-aki-mas." Are there regional variants of the word?
We just moved from the U.S. to New Zealand, and I tried my first tamarillo. Have you ever had one? I'd be very interested in your take on it.
Please put together a video featuring the “miracle berry”.
Emmy you should o a video showing what your go-to “girl dinner” would be. It’d be interesting to see your take on the trend
Ooo, I want to try monstera deliciosa fruit from Miami fruit! You should do that for this series.
Just curious. Eould a few grains of salt lend to the peanut butter flavor?
Is it anything like persimmons? Looks like a mini version to me, on the inside too. And you describe the texture as sweet potato and as mushy/sticky. That sounds like ripe persimmons.
You should try Quince fruit 😊
Did you inhale some helium before you recorded this? 😂
Have you ever tried a pawpaw? I had the opportunity to try one the other day. It's the largest tree-borne fruit native to the contiguous US, a close relative of the cherimoya, but many people have never heard of it because it's not well suited for commercial cultivation and thus is generally not available to consumers.
There's a search bar at the top. Type in Emmy made and pawpaw. It will pop up
Did you have to fight the deer for them😂? I sure did!
@@melhawk6284 I put rubber snakes in my pawpaw trees and that keeps the critters away.
Emmy tried one in a previous fruity fruits video. It really made me want to try it too! 😄
@@AnNguyen-zt1oz Every year in late autumn, there are paw paw festivals. Find one near you. There are many paw paw varieties and they all taste different. I have 2 trees in my urban yard and my pawpaws taste different year to year. They're a cool fruit. Worth growing. Pretty trees.
Boiled peanuts are the closest thing I’ve found in the US to natto.
I have noticed that unlike many other countries, the US doesn't seem to have a lot of "funky" foods. I've definitely not found the natto sort, anyway.
@@bjdefilippo447 Some pawpaw varieties are funky but you won't find pawpaws in grocery stores, you either need to forage or grow your own. The fruit doesn't stay fresh very long after harvest and it bruises easily. Worth growing a couple trees though.
looks so delicious thank you for sharing the recipe
is this video sped up? the voice sounds a bit higher than normal
I wonder since these are reminiscent of boiled peanuts could these be dehydrated or roasted and turned into a kind of butter for people with peanut allergies i personally myself don't have a peanut allergy but I'd imagine dehydrating them may make the flavor stronger if it works it would be a great alternative
So cool!
That is an interesting fruit. Thanks for sharing.
Emmy! Can you try mangosteen???!
ever had medlars? I last had them over three decades ago, in childhood. they really look horrible and are the sweetest thing on the planet
Maybe you could try making a pb&j with peanut butter fruit jelly.
Eating goober peas. Thanks Emmy ❣️
🥜🥜🥜
When you cut open the ripe fruit, I thought the seed looked a bit like a persimmon seed. Is there really a similarity between the two seeds?
I thought of persimmons too. Esp when she described the texture as mushy and sticky and like yam.
Have you ever made anything with yew berry?
The color, flesh of the fruit, and texture in ripeness fothe peanut butter fruit reminds of me persimmons..
I love your fruity fruits videos!!🤩
I love on the coast of north carolinaand we eat boiled peanuts all The time,I even fix them myself,sometimes
Whenever I’m at Epcot at Walt Disney World, I see the peanut butter fruit plant in the greenhouses of the Living With the Land attraction. As peanut butter is my favorite food, I’m fascinated by this fruit. I’ve never had the opportunity to try it, though. Sounds like I’m not really missing out. I suppose I could grow the plant here in Central Texas where it’s hot most of the year, but I’m not a gardener at all so I’d probably fail at it. I’ll stick to actual peanut butter.
Be careful growing it in Texas lol this plant gets pissed off fast if it doesn’t get enough water, it will be wilting a lot in Texas
I'd love to see a collaboration between you and. Weird explorer. He travels the world looking for u usual fruit despite the name of his channel. 😊
PLEASE TELL ME WHERE IS YOUR FACEBOOK PAGE 😢 DID YOU TAKE IT DOWN??? DOES ANYONE KNOW HERE??
Here's my request: get your hands on the blackberry jam fruit and eat it together with the peanut butter fruit.
How does it compare to plums? Is the texture similar?
It’s drier than a plum, imo, i’d compare it to red bean paste
I think that the Peanut part of the name refers to the nutty flavor, and the Butter part of the name refers to the sticky, pasty texture. Just a random thought
Emme, we'd love to see you and Beryl Shereshewsky do a collaboration video together. That would be fun