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Apple Guava

Psidium guajava

Description:

This is a bumpy skinned fruit. The nurseryman who gave it to me said it was a Brazilian guava. I'd like to know more about it so I know hwen the fruit is ripe to pick.

1 Species ID Suggestions

HemaShah
HemaShah 12 years ago
Brazillian Guava
Psidium guineense Brazilian Guava - Psidium guineense


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5 Comments

Ava T-B
Ava T-B 12 years ago

Thanks again for the help everyone, I've decided it's an apple guava. Christiane, thanks for all the eating information; just had it with breakfast -- yummy!

Ava T-B
Ava T-B 12 years ago

Thanks lgCostaNut, S Frazier, and Christiane! I'll pick and cut one tomorrow to see what color it is inside (and post a picture) and I'll see how it tastes. Thanks for all your information and encouragement.

Christiane
Christiane 12 years ago

It is definitively a kind of Guava.

Guava is native to the warmer regions of the Americas stretching from Mexico to Peru. It can be eaten firm in the large, white flesh varieties or when soft in the common yellows. Some varieties of guava are grown in commercial plantations but most varieties are commonly found in backyards. The common yellow is regularly seen on roadsides across tropical north Queensland. In Hawaii it has been popularised as a fruit juice.

Characteristics Guavas are generally round to pear shaped and can weigh anything from 150 g up to 400 g, with an average diameter of between 2.5 cm and 10 cm. The flesh contains edible seeds and varies from white to salmon red in colour depending on variety.

Taste Crispy, sweet and slightly sour to mellow. A ripe, common guava has a full fruit flavour.

Keep at room temperature until ripe, then use or store in the refrigerator for a few days. When eaten as a fresh fruit, guavas should not be peeled because the edible rind contains a high concentration of vitamin C. In fact, guavas have about five times as much vitamin C as an orange!

Ripe guavas are delicious eaten fresh. They can also be poached in syrup, puréed for ice cream and sorbets, made into jam, juiced and used as flavouring for other foods. The Thai White variety can be eaten like an apple, or, when green, can be cooked as you would a vegetable.

Scott Frazier
Scott Frazier 12 years ago

We pick our guavas before they are completely yellow. At that point they are already very mushy. See http://www.projectnoah.org/spottings/716...

LarryGraziano
LarryGraziano 12 years ago

Is the fruit white, yellow, or pink inside?

Ava T-B
Spotted by
Ava T-B

San Diego, California, USA

Spotted on Oct 21, 2011
Submitted on Oct 21, 2011

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