Rabarbaro Zucca Bitters Rabbit -- Welsh Rabbiteye Blueberries Racer Pumpkins Rachel -- À la Rachel Sandwich Rack Lamb Chop Rack of Lamb Racks -- Cooling Racks -- Pie Raclette Cheese Raclette Jurassienne Raclette (Meal) Radiatori Radicchio Radish -- Horseradish Radishes Radishes -- Breakfast Radishes -- Daikon Radishes -- Pickled Daikon Raffald -- Elizabeth Rafzubin Apples Rag Baloney Rag Sausage Raggiolo Olives Rahi Blueberries Raicilla Raidir Raimu -- À la Rainbow Trout Rainier Cherries Raised Pies Raisin Seeder Raisin Vinegar Raisins Previous | Next | Cloudberries© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced Baked-Apple Berry Yellow BerryThe Cloudberry plant is a wild perennial that loves to grow in mossy areas or in tundra. It grows in northern areas such as Alaska, Scandinavia, New England, Russia, China and Canada. Most varieties don't grow very tall -- only about 3 inches (7 1/2 cm high) -- so they are more like ground cover, though a few varieties will grow 4 to 12 inches (10 to 25 cm) tall. The plants can propagate by seed or by spreading their roots. They have bright green, rounded leaves. Each plant only produces 1 flower and 1 berry at the end of a stalk. Some plants produce a male flower, some produce a female flower. Only the female ones produce a berry. If the frost is still heavy when the plants are flowering, there will be a low yield. When unripe, the berries are bright red or pale red, depending on variety, but they turn to yellow as they ripen. The plant is related to raspberries, and the 1/2 (1 cm) long berries look like golden raspberries (though the plant leaves are missing the rasps that raspberry leaves have.) When eaten fresh, the taste is very different from raspberries, though. They have a subtle, sweet taste that some people say reminds them vaguely of gooseberries. When cooked the taste is more like apples. The berries are very soft and juicy, making them hard to handle and ship. Consequently, they are mostly sold already made into pies or jams. They are good for jams and jellies because they naturally have a good deal of pectin in them. Jellies made from Cloudberries come out yellow. Attempts have been made since the mid-1900s to cultivate Cloudberries commercially in Scandinavia and in Scotland. Cultivars developed include Apollo, Fjellgull and Fjordgull.
Also called: Rubus chamaemorus (Scientific Name); Plaquebiere (French); Moltebeere, Multbeere, Multebeere, Torfbeere (German); Horomuiichigo (Japanese)
See Also:RaspberriesOther entries for:BerriesAkala Berries, Aronia Berries, Assai Berries, Baba Berries, Barberries, Bilberries, Black Gooseberries, Blackberries, Blueberries, Buffalo Currants, Bumbleberries, Cape Gooseberries, Cloudberries, Cranberries, Currants, Elderberries, Garden Huckleberries, Gooseberries, Haw Flakes, Hawthorne Berries, Huckleberry, Hudson Bay Currants, Jostaberries, Lingonberries, Mulberries, Otaheite Gooseberry, Raspberries, Red Currants, Saskatoon Berries, Sea Buckthorn, Serendipity Berries, Strawberries, Sunberries, Tayberries, Thimbleberries, Ugni, Waimate Berries, White Currants, Wineberries, Wonderberries, Worcesterberries Other entries for:Soft FruitCherries, Grapes Other entries for:FruitBananas, Bletting, Candied Fruit, Citrus Fruit, Dried Fruit, Drupes, Hard Fruit, Olives, Rhubarb |
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Baked-Apple Berry 