S'mores Sabat Mung Sable Potatoes Sabra Liqueur Sacchi -- Bartolomeo Sachertorte Sachet Bags Sack Apples Saco Potatoes Saddle of Lamb Saddle of Turkey Safe Cooking Temperatures Safflower Safflower Oil Saffron Saffron Thistle Sagan -- À la Sage Saginaw Gold Potatoes Sago Flour Sago Grubs Sago Meal Sago Palm Sago Pearls Sago Starch Sahnequark Saint-Germain -- À la Saint-Honoré Cream Saint-Mandé -- À la Saint Agur -- (Crème de) Saint Agur Cheese Saint Edmund's Pippin Saint Paulin Sake -- Fugu Sake -- Shiro Previous | Next | Maypop Fruit© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced Apricot Vine Purple Passion FlowerMaypop Fruit grows on a vine. The pulp inside the fruit is greyish, and sweet. The fruit is ripe for picking when the skin turns from green to yellow and the skin starts to shrivel a bit. The seeds inside are inedible. The vine will grow 10 to 20 feet (3 to 6 metres) long, and particularly likes to grow up trees or along fences. It dies back entirely in winter, but by the following May, it reappears and grow so fast that it appears it has just popped out of the ground (thus the name "May Pop.") It is so aggressive and hardy that some consider it a weed. It can grow from seed or by spreading its roots. It flowers with five-petalled fragrant blossoms, which bees and butterflies love. Cooking Tips Also called: Passiflora incarnata (Scientific Name)
Other entries for:Hard FruitApples, Apricots, Avocado, Chayote, Citrus Fruit, Guava Fruit, Kiwis, Mangos, Maypop Fruit, Medlars, Melons, Nectarines, Papaya, Passion Fruit, Peaches, Pears, Persimmons, Plums, Pomegranates, Quinces, Red Sorrel, Rose Hips, Sapote, Star Fruit, True Service Fruit Other entries for:FruitBananas, Bletting, Candied Fruit, Dried Fruit, Drupes, Olives, Rhubarb, Soft Fruit |
|

Apricot Vine 