The Head Gardener and I
wandered around Eastwoodhill Arboretum one morning recently while on holiday in Gisborne,
delighting in the various coloured trees – mainly oaks at this stage, but also
many other types of deciduous trees. It
was quite dangerous in places, because the pathways were strewn with thousands
of acorns, and I kept imagining those with less steady footing falling over
easily. We had the obligatory map but
were quite happy to just follow our noses, usually following Robert Frost’s dictate
about the road less travelled.
We came across an area that
seemed dedicated to edible plants of the more unusual kind, included a medlar, Mespilus germanica, in full fruit. I have seen the fruit before, and have seen
trees before, but have not seen a tree laden with fruit before. It is an interesting subject, being a member
of the vast rose family (as are many edible fruits) and seems to fit somewhere between
the pear species (of which there were many at Eastwoodhill) and the
hawthorn.
It makes a small tree, growing
about five metres high, with a similar spread, and looking not unlike an apple. It also has the great habit of colouring up
well in the autumn, usually taking on yellow and orange shades. Before then, though, the fruit become ready
for picking. They are unusual-looking
fruit – sort of like oversized rose hips in a way, brown and with a calyx on
the crown.
This southern European fruit was
once quite popular but has fallen from favour, probably because so many similar
fruits, such as apples and pears are readily available, and you do not have to
wait until the fruit is rotten to eat them. The technical term is “bletting”, but it
amounts to the same thing. After two to
three weeks in storage, the fruit
becomes soft, mushy brown, and is said to be both sweet and tasty, with a hint
of spicy applesauce. If you do not fancy
eating rotten fruit, perhaps it would be better to make a jelly from the fruit –
it is also said to be delicious.
Before we left for holiday I
had someone come in to see me at work, holding what at first appeared to be a semi-ripe
mango. When they explained it was
growing on a tree in their garden in Masterton I soon worked out it was not a
tropical fruit of any kind, but was a little puzzled. I cut the fruit open and could see lots of
seed inside, and could discern very little scent– but there was just enough for
me to realise what it was.
What I was looking at was a
fruit of an unusual deciduous shrub from China, fruit I had not seen for about
twenty-five years. It was from Pseudocydonia sinensis, another aromatic
fruit tree from the rose family, and another that is basically inedible!
This is an attractive small
tree – only about three meters tall – and is closely related to both the quince
tree of Europe, and the ‘japonica’ of the garden – Chaenomeles species. In spring it has pale pink flowers, which are
later followed by the ovoid fruit, about the size of a large pear. They are green for a long time, then take on reddish
hints before turning butter yellow as they ripen. They have a wonderful aroma, and a bowlful of
them will scent the whole house.
These fruit are very astringent
and very hard, and no amount of bletting will make them edible (at least not in
my estimation) but they do have a use – they make the most wonderful conserve,
not unlike quince conserve but much more aromatic. We had a specimen of this tree in our
nursery, probably about fifty years old or even older. It only fruited once for us but what it
lacked in regularity it made up for with enthusiasm, being heavily laden. A young student, who was working for us on work experience,
decided he wanted to use the fruit and took some home to make the
conserve. I’m not sure if he or his Mum
made it, but it was superb – it went really well with stewed apples.
I think I’d prefer a jar of that
to some freshly bletted medlars.
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