20. Sugar Apple 
Annona squamosa
 Sugar Apples or Sweetsop, is native to the tropical Americas but is   also widely grown in Pakistan, India and the Philippians. The fruit   looks a bit like a pine cone, and are about 10 cm in diameter. Under the   hard, lumpy skin is the fragrant, whitish flesh of the fruit, which   covers several seeds inside, and has a slight taste of custard.
 
19. Mammee Apple 
Mammea americana
Mammee Apple, Mamey Apple or Santo Domingo Apricot is a evergreen  tree native to 
South America  which was introduced to various other  regions of the world including  West Africa and South East Asia. The can  also be found in Florida and  Hawaii. The Mammee apple is actually a  berry and gets up to 20 cm in  diameter. It has a thick outer rind, with  soft orange to yellow pulp on  the inside. It usually had one seed in the  centre, but larger fruit  have been known to carry up to 4. The pulp is  sweet and fragrant. 
 
18. Cherymoya 
Annona cherimola
Cherymoya or custard apple is a deciduous plant found in the high  lying mountainous areas of South America. The fruit is vaguely round and  is found with 3 types of skin – Impressa (indented), Tuberculate  (covered in nodules) or 
intermediate (a combination of the first two).  
The flesh  inside the skin is very fragrant, white, juicy and has a  custard like  consistency. It is said that the fruit tastes like a  combination of  banana, 
passion fruit, papaya and pineapple. Mark Twain  said in 1866 “ the most delicious fruit known to men, cherimoya”
 
17. Platonia 
Platonia insignis
Platonia or Bacuri is a 
large tree  (reaching 40m) found in the rain  forests of Brazil and Paraguay. The  fruit become the size of a orange  and has a thick yellow peel which  oozes a yellow latex when pressed.  Inside there is a sticky white pulp,  wrapped around several black seeds,  which tastes pleasant and has a  sweet and sour flavor.
 
16. Cocona 
Solanum sessiliflorum
Cocona fruit is another tropical fruit found in the mountainous  regions of South America.  It grows on a small shrub, and can  miraculously grow from seed to  fruit in less than a 9 months, after  which the fruit will take another 2  months to ripen. The fruit is a  berry and come in red, orange or  yellow. It has a similar appearance to  tomatoes, and is said to taste  like a mixture between tomatoes and  lemons.
 
15. Breadfruit 
Artocarpus altilis
Breadfruit is a large tree, in the mulberry family, found native to  the  Philippians and all the islands in Southeast Asia. The fruit is   similar to bananas, as they can be eaten raw when ripe, and cooked when   unripe. The ripe fruit is soft and sweet and the unripe fruit is harder   and starchy, which is where it got the name breadfruit from, as it   tastes similar to freshly baked bread when cooked.
 
14. Duku 
Lansium domesticum
Duku or lungsat are two very similar fruits found throughout Asia.  They  come from the same family, look and taste identical, with one   difference. The skin of the lungsat contains a latex substance, which is   not poisonous, but causes the skin to stick slightly to the fruit,   whereas the duku has no latex and the peel is removed with more ease.   Inside, the fruit has 5 segments, some of which has bitter seeds inside.   It is a very sweet fruit and can be prepared in a number of different   ways, including being canned in syrup or being dried like raisins.
 
13. Safou 
Dacryodes edulis
Safou is an evergreen tree found in the humid tropical forests of   Africa, as far south as Angola, and as far north as Nigeria. The fruits   are also known as African pears and are oblong dark blue to violet   fruits up to 14cm in length, with pale green flesh inside. These fatty   fruits have been said to have the ability to put an end to starvation in   Africa, as 48% of the fruit is made up of 
essential fatty acids,  amino  acids, Vitamins and triglycerides. The have estimated that a one  hectare  plantation would be able to produce 7-8 tons of oil, and all  parts of  the plant can be used. 
 
12. Jabuticaba 
Myrciaria cauliflora
Jabuticaba, or the Brazilian grape tree, is a very strange plant  native  to the South Eastern parts of Brazil. What makes this plant so  strange  is that it fruits from its trunk. No I did not make that up, and  no  the picture has not been photo shopped. Initially, yellowish white   flowers will appear all over the trunk and main 
branches,  these flowers  will then turn into fruit, about 3 – 4cm in diameter.  Inside the thick  purple skin is the soft gelatinous flesh of the fruit,  along with 1 – 4  black seeds. The fruit is sweet and can be eaten as  is or made into a  wine or liqueur. Unfortunately the fruit does not  keep long when off the  tree and will start to ferment after about 3 or 4  days. 
 
11. Rambutan 
Nephelium lappaceum
 Rambutan is an odd fruit that  looks like a furry strawberry from the  outside, and much like a lychee  on the inside. It is native to South  East Asia, but has been spread and  a smaller “wild” version can be found  in Costa Rica, where it is  called a Chinese sucker. The fruit is an  oval shape and about 3-6 cm in  diameter. Inside the slightly hard, but  easily peal able skin, you can  find a soft fruit that tastes slightly  sweet, with a possible sour  tinge.
10. Noni 
Morinda citrifolia
 Noni otherwise known by many different names around the world,   including the great moringa, Indian mulberry, dog dumpling and pace, is   related to the coffee bean plant and is native throughout South East   Asia and Australasia, but is cultivated throughout the tropics. The tree   carries fruit throughout the year and the fruit tend to have a very   pungent odour when ripening (also known as the cheese fruit or vomit   fruit). Despite the smell, the fruit is high in fibre, 
vitamin A,   protein, Iron and calcium, and is the staple diet on many Pacific   Islands. The fruit can either be cooked into a stew or eaten raw with   salt. 
 
9. Marula 
Sclerocarya birrea
The Marula is a deciduous tree native to Southern and Eastern Africa.   The distribution of the tree throughout Africa, follow the migratory   patterns of the Bantu people, as it was an important source of food, and   they planted more trees along their way. The green fruit ripens and   turns yellow, the white flesh inside is succulent and has a very   distinct flavor. After falling off the tree, the fruit will start to   ferment and these draw in animals, like elephants and baboons, for a   slightly alcoholic treat. The fruit is also used to make a popular   liqueur called Amarula, which can be found at any duty-free liquor store   at airports.
 
8. Salmonberry 
Rubus spectabilis
Salmonberrys are native to the west coast of North America,  stretching from midway through Alaska, all 
the way down  to California.  They are found in moist forests and create dense  thickets. The fruit  looks similar to raspberries, but are more orange  in color. They are  sweet when eaten raw, but are often 
processed into juice, wine, candies  and jams.
 
Salak fruit, also known as the snake fruit, comes from a species of   palm native to Indonesia. These fruit grow at the base of the palm, and   gained the name snake fruit from their red brown, scaly skin. The skin   is easily removed, and inside are 3 white, sweet segments that each   contain a large black inedible seed. When eaten, the fruit have a   slightly acidic but sweet flavor, and the consistency of apples.
 
Bael, wood apple or stone apple is a specie native to India, but  found  throughout Southeast Asia. Bael is a smooth fruit with a woody  peel  that is colored yellow, green or grey. The hard, woody, outer peel  is  so hard that it has to be cracked with a hammer. Inside is an  aromatic  yellow pulp with several hairy seeds. The flesh can be eaten  either  dried or fresh. From the fresh fruit, a juice called sharbat can  be  made, adding water, sugar and lime juice to the pulp. It takes just  one  large fruit to make 6liters of sharbat.
 
5. Star Apple 
Chrysophyllum cainito
 The Star apple is a fruit native to the low-lying areas of Central   America and the West Indies. The underside of the evergreen leaves shine   with a golden color from a distance, and the tree carries small white   to purple flowers with a sweet fragrance. The fruit is round, purple  and  has a thick, latex filled skin. If the fruit is cut horizontally, a   clear star pattern can be seen in the white purple pulp. The fruit is   delicious fresh, with a intense sweet taste.
 
4. Star fruit 
Averrhoa carambola
Star fruit or carambola is a fruit tree native to the Philippians,  but  can be found throughout Southeast Asia, East Asia, South America,   Florida and Hawaii. This fruit has five ridges running down its length,   which when cut sideways, makes the star pattern after which it is  named.  The fruit is rich in Vitamin C, and Antioxidants. The fruit  turns a  bright yellow when ripe, has a waxy skin and the entire fruit  is edible,  juicy and crunchy.
 
3. Horned Melon 
Cucumis metuliferus
The horned melon, also known as African cucumber or jelly melon, is  an  annual vine native to Africa, but can now be found grown in  California,  Australia, New Zealand and Chile as well. When ripe, the  melon has a  thick spiky yellow outer skin, with bright green, jelly like  flesh. The  flesh is often compared to the taste of a banana, with the  texture of  the seedy part of a cucumber or tomato. The thick skin can be  eaten and  is a good source of vitamin C and fibre.
 
Pitaya, or dragon fruit is a cactus fruit that can be found  throughout  Asia, Australasia, North America and South America, even  though they  are believed to be native to Mexico originally. There are  two main  types of pitaya, the sour types, typically eaten in the  Americas, and  sweet types found across Asia. The fruit comes in 3  different color  varieties, Labelled as red, yellow and Costa Rican  pitayas. The “red”  fruits are generally a bright magenta color on the  outside, with yellow  flesh. The Yellow Pitaya is yellow inside and out,  and the Costa Rican  pitayas are magenta on the outside and the inside.  They smell  deliciously fragrant and most has a sweet flavor similar to a  kiwi  fruit.
 
1. Miracle Fruit 
Synsepalum dulcificum

The miracle fruit, or sweet berries, is a very strange berry native  to  West Africa. What makes the fruit strange and miraculous, is  miraculin  (a sugar substitute), which is found in large quantities in  the fruit  combined with a glycoprotein. The fruit itself does not  contain a lot  of sugar, and tastes only mildly sweet but when eaten, the  glycoprotein  binds to the tongues taste buds, which, for about an hour  after eating  the fruit, distorts any other taste into sweetness. With  that effect  you could technically eat a lemon, and it would taste like  ball of  syrup. Although the definite reason for this occurrence is not  fully  understood, it would seem as if the miraculin distorts the shape  of the  sweetness receptors in the tongue so that they pick up on acid  instead  of sweetness. The sweetness receptors on your tongue then  transmit to  the brain to taste sweetness when they come in contact with  any  acidity. In the 70s attempts were made to commercialize and sell the   fruit as a diet aid, as it has the potential to turn any meal sweet,   without affecting your calorie intake. These attempts were shattered   when the FDA declared it a food additive, due to pressure from sugar   companies who could foresee big losses in profits. In the last two years   the berries have been making a comeback, by being the guest star of   many tasting parties in the states. The berries are dried and exported,   and the party guests each have one and then taste all kinds of common   foods to experience a new taste sensation with every bite.
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