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The city is noted for its export of the famous Jaffa oranges.
There was nothing in there except an old cardboard Jaffa oranges box.
The dense chocolate is cut by the sweet and sour taste of Jaffa oranges.
If you are going to boycott, don't stop at a few avocados or Jaffa oranges.
"The Jaffa orange was a big symbol, but now we must concentrate on producing special, better kinds of citrus."
And the Jaffa oranges and things like that.
The name derives from the Jaffa orange.
"They have some excellent Jaffa oranges here."
Do you need prime Jaffa oranges?
During the mid-19th century, the city grew prosperous from trade, especially of silk and Jaffa oranges, with Europe.
There, Otto began his cytological career by counting the chromosomes of the Jaffa orange.
Though cotton left its mark throughout the region, the only commodity, that remains a symbol of production in Israel is the Jaffa orange.
In the 1950s and 1960s, Jaffa oranges became emblems of the Israeli state.
Jaffa orange: grown in the Middle East, also known as "Shamouti".
These were the original Jaffa oranges; they were grown in Palestine long before the Israelis came.
Sabra liqueur (dark chocolate and Jaffa oranges)
"We have some very fine Jaffa oranges," he said hurriedly, pointing to a corner where they were stored, behind a high rampart of biscuit tins.
Jaffa oranges are susceptible to Alternaria, a type of fungus, and are prone to alternate bearing.
To give an example from exporting, Israel is now known for its high tech industries as much as for its Jaffa oranges.
Were you one of those people who boycotted Jaffa oranges one week then Outspan oranges the other?
J for oranges (Jaffa oranges)
In the middle of winter, I was offered fresh Jaffa oranges, bananas, apples and grapes for breakfast at my hotel, the Gellert.
Jaffa oranges, also known as shamouti, are practically seedless, with a flavour that has been described as "excellent" and "sweet and fine."
The Jews who immigrated to Palestine with the First Aliyah introduced cultivation methods that spurred the Jaffa orange industry.
Jaffa oranges are harvested in Israel between November and March, with the marketing season beginning in September and extending through until April.