T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2960.1 | | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Mar 19 1991 07:38 | 6 |
| To really minimize the waste, you need a small knife and LOTS of time. Then,
you peel off a thin layer of skin and individually carve out each "eye". Any
faster technique causes some higher degree of waste. The pineapple widgets you
can buy cause maximal waste (not counting just tossing the whole thing), but
yield edible fruit in the shortest amount of time. I personally have opted for
the true yuppie solution: I buy prepeeled pineapples at Idylwilde Farms.
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2960.2 | growing pinapples | BROKE::THATTE | Nisha Thatte | Thu Mar 21 1991 12:16 | 12 |
|
This is probably the wrong place to ask how to grow a pineapple but...
When my husband and I were in Hawaii on our honeymoon we picked up a pamphlet
on how to grow a pineapple from a pinapple that you had just eaten.
Unfortunately it got thrown away and I don't remember anything about the
technique (other than it took a long time).
Does anyone know how to do this?
-- Nisha
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2960.3 | PINEAPPLE PLANT | SOLVIT::KLATSKIN | | Thu Mar 21 1991 12:50 | 7 |
| All I did was cut off the top of the pineapple and literally just set
it in some soil. That was last spring and the pineapple plant is
getting hugh!
I kept it in a sunny window over the winter that gets a lot of sunlight
so the plant would have warmth. And, of course I watered it. But
that's it.
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2960.4 | Yes, it's real easy - but prickly! | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Thu Mar 21 1991 14:33 | 8 |
| .3 is right - they are real easy to grow. But I don't have one
anymore: they are not what you might call a friendly houseplant if you
live in a small place - the spines on the leaves are REAL prickly! But
it is interesting to grow one, especially if you have kids - right up
there with growing an avacado pit (which makes a larger but friendlier
houseplant).
/Charlotte
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2960.5 | A few questions | AKOCOA::SCHOFIELD | | Thu Mar 21 1991 15:47 | 6 |
| ...uuummmm, how long does it take to get a real honest-to-goodness
pineapple? One 'season'? Do you get this TREE growing in your window
sill? How much space do you need?
This could be fun!
beth
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2960.6 | | ENABLE::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Thu Mar 21 1991 16:41 | 17 |
| Depends on the variety of pineapple and the growing conditions, but it
takes several years before the plant develops fruit. My experience has
been that in the Northeastern US, we don't get enough hours of
sunlight to yield fruit. When the plant reaches a modest size, it
stops growing, and never develops fruit. If you have a near-perfect
place to grow it, you might get fruit, but on average, it probably
won't. And if it did, it probably wouldn't be very tasty.
Also, I'm not sure that the soil conditions are very good here. In
places I've seen them growing, the soil is a bright red clay, not the
acid sandy soil we have in New England.
The leaves are downright dangerous. They can give you a nasty stab or
take out an eye.
A mature plant can be seven or eight feet tall (maybe more), and as
wide. You'll need a big windowsill!
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2960.7 | Pineapple tree? No! | TLE::SASAKI | Marty Sasaki ZK02-3N30 381-0151 | Fri Mar 22 1991 16:26 | 9 |
| Are we talking about the same plant as I saw growing in Hawaii when I
was a kid? Pineapples do not grow on trees, but on bushes. The bushes
in the Pineapple fields aren't much higher than waist high. I don't
think that a pineapple is self fertilizing, although I do think that
they have only one sex. So, in order to have a fruit you would have to
fertilize it. Looks like this note should be shifted over to the
gardening notes file...
Marty Sasaki
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2960.8 | Imagination runs wild on that one...... | COMET::HAYESJ | Duck and cover! | Mon Mar 25 1991 05:49 | 9 |
| re: .2
Grow a pineapple from a pineapple that you had just eaten?!! I don't
think that would be possible, as you already ate the pineapple. And if
it is possible, I don't think I want to hear how you plant it. Y' know
what I mean?
Steve
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2960.9 | | MACROW::GLANTZ | Mike 227-4299 DECtp TAY Littleton MA | Mon Mar 25 1991 08:55 | 14 |
| Re .last, unless you eat the top of the pineapple, there's no problem
growing a plant from one you've just eaten. It's the top that you put
in soil to start a new plant.
Re Marty: I grew up in Hawaii, too (for a while, anyway -- lived in
Manoa and went to public school there, where I was the only non-Asian
kid in my class). You're right that many plants are about waist-high,
but actually, the fruit is at about that level. The tops of the
tallest leaves are at around eye level. And some of the big ones were
easily taller than an adult. Next time you're on Oahu, take a look at
some of the plants right outside the Dole tourist stand in the middle
of the island! Anyway, we tried to grow some, but our yard didn't have
enough sun, and they never got very big. So I don't have much hope for
getting fruit in MetroWest.
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2960.10 | pineapple == Bromeliad | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Mon Mar 25 1991 09:58 | 6 |
| Pineapples are a type of plant called a Bromeliad. These plants
produce new plants from offshoots, not from seeds. Once a plant
produces a fruit (pineapple in this case) it dies. The Leaves on the
top of the pineapple are actually the start of another new plant.
That's why you can plant it and start this whole cycle over again,
and over again, and over again.....
|
2960.11 | Do pineapples cause ulcers? | GRACIE::RANDALL | | Fri Mar 29 1991 13:54 | 5 |
| Re .10,
Bromelaid: A marmelaid made from Bromo-Seltzer. Good for ulcers caused
by eating pineapples. 8^)
Randy
|
2960.12 | Eye removal made easy! | MR4DEC::DERAMO | | Mon Apr 01 1991 13:31 | 13 |
| Back to the original question on extracting fruit from fresh pineapples
... I picked up a neat tip from Joy of Cooking for getting out the
"eyes." After peeling the pineapple with a sharp knife -- we trimmed
about 1/4" thickness off the entire fruit -- you'll have numerous eyes.
If you study the pattern, you'll notice that the eyes spiral in fairly
straight rows up the sides of the fruit. Joy of Cooking suggests
making knife cuts along these rows to remove them. Two cuts, forming a
shallow "V" let you remove rows of the eyes.
I found this method much less tedious that individual eye removal.
And the resulting fruit has a neat design in the skin!
|
2960.13 | Use a carving board if you have one | RANGER::PESENTI | Only messages can be dragged | Tue Apr 02 1991 07:23 | 5 |
| By the way, if you do decide to peel it the manual way, it helps with
the clean up if you use a meat carving board. I'm typing of the ones
with the gutter all around and a spot for the juices to gather. A
really ripe pineapple will give off a lot of juice during the peeling
and de-eyeing.
|
2960.14 | A question about cans | KAHALA::ROWE | | Wed Apr 08 1992 12:15 | 6 |
| This seems as good a place as any to ask this question.....
I have an old recipe of my grandmother's that calls for a "Number 2" can
of crushed pineapple. Anyone know what size can that means?
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2960.15 | | IAMOK::MARINER | | Wed Apr 08 1992 12:46 | 8 |
| Well a number 303 was a little larger than a can of Campbell's soup,
sort of the size of the larger soup cans. I think a number 2 can was
about the size of the large size Italian whole or crushed tomato cans
like you use to make spaghetti sauce.
I think I have that right, it's been a long time.
Mary Lou
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2960.16 | Can question answer? | LOMITA::GOHN | "WITH THE WIND" | Thu Apr 09 1992 12:07 | 9 |
| According to a list I came across some years ago........
A #2 can = 1 lb. 4 oz. or 1 pt. 2 oz. or 2-1/2 cups
A 303 can = 16-17 oz. or 2 cups
Hope this is of some help.
Linda
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2960.17 | Thanks! | KAHALA::ROWE | | Thu Apr 09 1992 12:20 | 6 |
| It DOES help...now I don't have to guess how much to use.
Thanks Linda and Mary Lou!
Jayne
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