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14 results in Produce for "dragon fruit"
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ProducePeaches
Peaches are the most short-windowed fruit of the year — and the one where ripeness matters most. A local peach at peak ripeness is the taste of summer in a way no other fruit quite is.
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ProduceWatermelon
Watermelon is peak-summer fruit with a short window for the best local flavor. A good melon feels heavy, sounds full, and has a creamy field spot where it rested on the ground.
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ProduceHow to make fresh produce last all week
Most produce spoilage comes down to a handful of avoidable mistakes. These storage habits will get you through a full week of fresh vegetables and fruit with far less waste.
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ProduceHow to ripen peaches without ruining them
Peaches ripen quickly, and the gap between underripe and overripe can be a matter of hours. These techniques let you control the process so you eat them at peak flavour.
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ProducePears
Pears are fall fruit that ripen after harvest, which makes timing matter. Bartlett, Bosc, Anjou, Comice, and Asian pears all have different textures and best uses.
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ProduceWhat is a blueberry and how to use it
Blueberries are easy fruit to use because they work for fresh eating, baking, and freezing with almost no prep. Their strength is simplicity.
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ProduceWhat is a peach and how to use it
Peaches are juicy summer fruit that can be eaten fresh, baked, grilled, or cooked into simple sauces. Their biggest challenge is timing rather than complexity.
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ProduceWhat is a strawberry and how to use it
Strawberries are sweet, fragrant fruit that work best when you respect how delicate they are. They can be eaten fresh, cooked lightly, or frozen without much trouble.
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ProduceBell Peppers
Bell peppers are the same fruit at different stages of ripeness — green is unripe, red is fully ripe, and yellow and orange fall in between. That distinction explains nearly everything about how they taste and how to…
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ProduceStrawberries
Strawberries are the first real fruit of summer — and the produce where the gap between local and shipped is widest. A ripe local strawberry tastes of strawberry. A shipped one tastes of pink water.
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ProduceTomatoes
Tomatoes are the defining taste of summer — and the produce where supermarket shortcomings are most obvious. A local tomato in August is a different fruit entirely from a supermarket one.
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ProduceHow to store apples
Apples keep best when they stay cool, dry, and separate from the produce most sensitive to ethylene. They are one of the easier fruits to stretch out if you store them deliberately.
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ProduceBlueberries
Blueberries are one of the more successful summer fruits — they store well, freeze perfectly, and the local varieties have a depth of flavor supermarket berries rarely match.
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ProduceHow to freeze fresh berries
Freezing berries at home takes less than 30 minutes and keeps them usable for up to a year. Here is how to do it without ending up with a solid, unusable clump.