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_Defining Fruit

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here are two definitions for fruit--botanical and culinary. Botanically, a fruit is the pulpy part of a plant that houses its seed. Under that definition the fruit category includes tomatoes, eggplants, chiles, squash, and corn, along with oranges, apples, and bananas. Confused? You’re not alone. The problem comes from our cultural preference for defining fruit by how we use it, rather than by what it is. In the kitchen we use the word "fruit" only to connote botanical fruits that are high in sugar or that we prepare with sugar. Therefore, watermelon is a fruit, but cucumber is not (even though they are genetically related). There are numerous examples of botanical fruits that are known as vegetables, but there is only one botanical vegetable that we think of as fruit. Rhubarb, which is usually cooked in sugar to tame its tartness, is a not a fruit--it is a stem.






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01-The Changing Face of Homemade
02-What's Your Hurry?
03-The Ingredients
04-Organic and All-Natural Ingredients
05-Setting Up A Pantry
06-Using the Recipes
_What Makes An Onion Sweet?
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_What Is Bruschetta?
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_The Allure Of Pouched Fish
_Melting Cheese
_Defining Fruit
_V8: A Garden In A Jar
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