Some pictures of Diana and Myself, where we now live and places around us, things that we find interesting, amusing or just plain weird!
Tuesday, 4 August 2020
As Many Regular Readers Will Know,
Steve and Kai have a very successful garden,
and have brought bushels of their home grown produce around, with that in mind I started looking at some of the more unusual produce and found these, albino
cucumbers, as their name suggests, these heirloom cucumbers are a bright white,
even though the stalks they grow on have a common dark green foliage. Albino
cucumbers don’t simply occur as an anomaly, although that may have been the
case with the first such specimen. They are actually a slowly developed variety
of cucumber that dates back to the 1893, when the Burpee seed company featured
it in its famous catalog for the first time. It had been sent in by a customer
in 1890, and Burpee spent the next three years breeding and evaluating the
plant before launching it commercially,
over
the last century, albino cucumbers have become known under many names,
including “White Wonder”, “Ivory King,” “Jack Frost,” “Landreths White Slicing”
and “White Albino.”
according to Reimer Seeds, albino
cucumbers are “exceptionally crisp and very delicious without the bitter taste.
Great for salads, pickles, or gourmet dishes. It looks great in salads to adds
extra color to gourmet dishes. The tender white skins are so thin that they
won’t even need peeling. Great for making chips, spears, and whole pickles.”
although not as common as
their green cousins, white cucumbers are not exactly considered rare, though to
be honest I had never heard of them before apparently seeds are widely
available online, it’s just that most people don’t even know they exist, so it
is not just me that did not know about them!
No comments:
Post a Comment