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What Is an Ugli Fruit?

2008_04_30-Ugli.jpgWhile we believe in buying local and buying in season, we sometimes allow a splurge on an exotic unknown from another part of the world. This week, it was the ugli fruit we saw at Whole Foods. Here are our impressions of this big citrus fruit from Jamaica...

2008_04_30-Ugli02.jpgWe had heard of the ugli fruit (sometimes known by one grower's name for it - uniq) but had never tried one. Their bright orange skins and fat teardrop shapes were very appealing, so we picked just one up (at $2.99 each they were an investment!).

The ugli fruit was found growing wild in Jamaica, and it is believed to be a hybrid of grapefruit and tangerine, and perhaps pomelo. It is indeed a rather ugly fruit - mostly green and wrinkled until it is fully ripe, when it turns orange like ours.

It's available from December through April, and sometimes in the fall.

2008_04_30-Ugli03.jpgWe cut it open and found two heart-shaped halves with enormous segment of citrus inside.

2008_04_30-Ugli05.jpgThe peel is very thick and soft and peels away easily. It almost falls away from the juicy segments.

The segments tasted almost exactly like ripe navel orange, sweet and juicy.

2008_04_30-Ugli04.jpgThe skin around the segments is a little thick for our taste, though - almost unpleasantly papery.

If these grew in our backyard (in Jamaica!) we would gladly eat them. But frankly, we would prefer oranges from Florida over these at this point, especially at $2.99 each.

(Images: Faith Hopler)

Comments (4)

Maybe you're supposed to eat it like a pomelo-- without the skin around the segments.

posted by JJJ111 on 2008-04-30 20:44:01
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I am from Jamaica and we use the ugly fruit mainly as a drink, like you would make lemonade. I am happy to see whole foods carrying one of our produce. Faith if ever you decide to visit our beautiful island I hope you will experience a drink made from the ugly fruit. I am sure there are other recipes using this fruit.

posted by jaudre on 2008-04-30 21:48:59
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The had a marmalade made out of the rind of this thing in cooking light, except that they prefer to call it uniq fruit. I like the ugli name, it makes me thing of the ugliripe tomatoes that the people in florida didn't want to sell outside of the state as they found them an embarrassment, despite their better taste...priorities.

I'm not sure if this link will work for non-subscribers.

http://find.myrecipes.com/recipes/recipefinder.dyn?action=displayRecipe&recipe_id=1696582

posted by sally599 on 2008-05-01 10:39:41
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Best to remove the skin from the segments, definitely. And I also see these marketed, in the spring, as 'uniq fruit' sometimes. Or as 'ugli fruit'. They're tasty any way they're labelled, and I'm interested to try a lemonade-like drink of them.

posted by moiety on 2008-05-01 11:39:24
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