Due to a request, I am documenting how we have been growing pineapple plants. We have some that are over a year old, so we can keep them alive for at least that long. They don't produce fruit for at least a year and a half, so the jury is still out on whether ours will do that. I started a new plant yesterday for this series of posts.
Without further ado, let's start:
Step 1: purchase a pineapple with a crown.
Step 2: grip the fruit and crown in separte hands and twist apart.
Step 3: remove several bottom layers of leaves until you have a couple of rows of root nubs visible.
Step 4: place the crown in a glass of water such that the roots are covered.
I will add more posts as this new plant grows. However, until then, here are some of our current plants that are a range of ages. We also have a couple of avocado trees that have successfully sprouted. Sadly, I failed on the mangos. Next year!
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
Mango Sauce
Note: we've been quite busy lately and thus no posts in a while, but it has been a good thing. :-)
Question for you: have you ever gotten so many mangos (for free from coworkers, they seem to be the zucchini of out here, when you have some, you have a ton) that you can't eat them all before you go bad? Well have I got the solution for you!
Mango sauce! Like apple sauce, but with mangos.
Not much too this, I cut up about 5-10 mangos into about half inch cubes, and cooked them down with some cardamom in place of the cinnamon you might use in apple sauce. When I only had unripe mangos, I added some sugar, but the best was to have a combination of ripeness.
Mango season was back in June/July, but I just realized that I had forgotten to make the post.
Question for you: have you ever gotten so many mangos (for free from coworkers, they seem to be the zucchini of out here, when you have some, you have a ton) that you can't eat them all before you go bad? Well have I got the solution for you!
Mango sauce! Like apple sauce, but with mangos.
Not much too this, I cut up about 5-10 mangos into about half inch cubes, and cooked them down with some cardamom in place of the cinnamon you might use in apple sauce. When I only had unripe mangos, I added some sugar, but the best was to have a combination of ripeness.
Cut mango in the pot.
Ono mango sauce ready to serve.
Mango season was back in June/July, but I just realized that I had forgotten to make the post.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)






