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"Kind of a cross between a custard apple and a kiwifruit."
A large ashtray on the table had the remains of a sliced custard apple.
For many years, people confused it with the soursop or the custard apple.
The custard apple matures in just four years.
It is closely allied to the custard apple.
The region also produces oranges and custard apples aplenty.
Custard apple may also refer to similar fruits produced by related trees:
This village and its surroundings are famous for custard apple cultivation and marketing.
It is part of the custard apple family (Annonaceae).
Percolation tanks, like the custard apples, was another name recited in a reverential tone.
The staple crop is rice, but some cotton and tobacco are grown, while the custard apples are famous.
In Malayalam, it is called mullaatha, literally thorny custard apple.
The fruit is fleshy and soft, sweet, white in color, with a sherbet-like texture, which gives it its secondary name, custard apple.
Custard apples.
It is an important agricultural center, mainly because the plantations of avocado and cherimoya (custard apple) trees.
The location is best suited for processing grapes, turmeric, mangoes, pomegranates, citrus fruits and custard apple.
Peaches, custard apples, capulines, avocado, apple, lime and pomegranates grow in the area.
The suburb's name comes from the words Sitaphal and mandi meaning market of Custard apples.
Annonaceae, the custard apple or soursop family.
Mr. Rangaswami, the bird watcher, adored the custard apple.
Bananas and plantains will ripen over our heads--avocados and custard apples, also.
Annonaceae (Custard apple family).
B Map Raspberries, quinces, figs, peaches, persimmons, custard apples.
Previously, farmers foremost arrived here on bullock carts with custard apples and other fruits and sell their produce, a routine which continues even today.
Today, restaurants offer fir-ni in a wide range of flavors including apricot, mango, fig, saffron and custard apple.
He strode off in search of fresh lancewood.
Lancewood, a tough elastic wood of various trees, was often used especially for carriage shafts.
Lancewood sailed for the western Pacific Ocean 24 January 1945.
The party had been pushing through difficult lancewood scrub and harsh terrain at a little over a kilometre a day.
Lancewood received one battle star for World War II service.
He had gone to the meeting with his father and had a new lancewood bow and some arrows with him.
A mature toothed lancewood can reach 6 metres height with a trunk of up to 25 cm in diameter.
The tree is sometimes also called fierce lancewood in reference to its fierce looking saw tooth shaped juvenile leaves.
Toothed lancewood is generally hardy and can withstand some minor frost damage to the tip (which may cause it to branch).
Lancewood may refer to:
Toothed lancewood used to be rare in cultivation, but is now a favoured gardening plant in New Zealand.
Several species originated in the West Indies including Ficus, gumbo-limbo, lancewood and paradise trees.
Closely related is Pseudopanax ferox, the toothed lancewood.
I wonder, Miss Stanton-Lacy, how many persons are aware that the lancewood supplies the shafts for their carriages?"
Curtisiaceae (cape lancewood)
The black lancewood or carisiri of The Guianas is of remarkably slender form.
Loaded with net panels, Lancewood sailed to Saipan 14 to 17 October and unloaded her cargo.
Wattles are also relatively common including Northern Black Wattle and lancewood (northern golden wattle).
It is similar to the more common Lancewood Pseudopanax crassifolius but with more prominently tooth-shaped leaves.
Pseudopanax ferox, a small tree endemic to New Zealand (also known as the toothed lancewood)
Alan Marshall, Lancewood, Indra Publishers, Australia, 1999.
"Hardly, however, to rank in majesty with the mahogany, which grows in the West Indies, or in usefulness with the lancewood.
Harpullia pendula, known as the tulipwood or tulip lancewood is a small to medium sized rainforest tree from Australia.
After shakedown off the California coast, Lancewood was assigned to the 12th Naval District, San Francisco, California.
The dominant Acacia species varies with the location, and may include lancewood, bendee, mulga, gidgee and brigalow.
The larvae feed on plants in the Annonaceae family.
It is part of the custard apple family (Annonaceae).
Mitrella is a genus of plants in the Annonaceae family.
The causative agent, annonacin, is present in many of the annonaceae.
The larvae probably feed on Annonaceae species.
Meiogyne is a genus of flowering plants with about 24 species belonging to the family Annonaceae.
Annonaceae the custard-apple, or annona family, the largest family of the magnolia order.
Uvariodendron kirkii is a species of flowering plant in the Annonaceae family.
Annonaceae, the custard apple or soursop family.
Annonaceae (Custard apple family).
Acetogenins are a class of polyketide natural products found in plants of the family Annonaceae.
Several members of the family Annonaceae are also under investigation for uses of a group of chemicals called acetogenins.
Isolona is a genus of plant in family Annonaceae (custard apple or sour sop).
Annona purpurea is an edible fruit and medicinal plant in the Annonaceae family.
Goniothalamus is one of the largest palaeotropical genera of plant in family Annonaceae.
They are especially fond of Lauraceae, annonaceae, myrtaceae, sapotaceae.
Annona reticulata is a small deciduous or semi-evergreen tree in the plant family Annonaceae.
Annonaceae (custard apple family, over 2000 species of trees, shrubs, and lianas; mostly tropical but some temperate)
Anonidium usambarense was a tall tree in the Annonaceae family, formerly endemic to Tanzania.
The Annonaceae and saprotrophic plants from the neotropics, such as the Burmanniaceae, are two major areas of research.
Monophyly and inter-familial systematics have been well supported for Annonaceae by a combination of morphological and molecular evidence.
Artabotrys odoratissimus is a plant of annonaceae family and Artabotrys genus.
Xylopia aethiopica is an evergreen, aromatic tree, of the Annonaceae family that can grow up to 20m high.
Guinea pig maximization test of the bark extract from pawpaw, Asimina triloba (Annonaceae).
A synopsis of Goniothalamus species (Annonaceae) in Thailand, with descriptions of three new species.