
(feijoa: acca sellowiana)
october 2009
carrboro, north carolina
october 2009
carrboro, north carolina
My plants - a total of 5, which range in size from 6" seedlings to a 2' plant, aren't yet mature enough to produce fruit, and getting feijoas to set fruit is notoriously challenging, so who knows if they ever will? Still, an absolutely stunning fruit isn't the only virtue with feijoas.
If you have eaten a feijoa, you know that it's one of the most delicious things in the world: the fruit looks a bit like a dull, green avocado. Sliced lengthwise into two halves, much of the flesh is of a texture reminiscent of a soft pear, slightly granular, though not as granular as a pear. At the center, there's a pocket of sweet, jelly-like pulp, containing a large number of very tiny seeds.
And what of the flavor? The flavor and fragrance are both reminiscent of a very strong mixture of strawberry and pineapple. The flavor is somewhat layered - the firm flesh beneath the rind approaches a citrus-like level of tartness, while the soft pulp at the center is very, very sweet. Scooping the flesh from each half mixes the sweet and sour parts of the fruit, producing a phenomenally complex, shape-shifting flavor.
Feijoas also produce equally dramatic flowers, and those flowers - while spectacular in appearance - do not produce nectar. Thus, they don't attract insects very well, so pollination is a bit tricky. The edible petals are sweet, and attractive to hummingbirds (which will eat the petals, while pollinating the remainder of the flower in the process); otherwise hand pollination and luck are the only way to get fruit. This difficulty explains the relative rarity of feijoas in supermarkets, though they are cultivated in Australia and New Zealand (where they are enormously popular), and their native Argentina.
My plants are interesting. They are steady growers - overall they are rather petite and shrubby, but with a very sprawly, lanky habit. The leaves are a rich, deep green, with a soft, whitish peach fuzz on the undersides; their deep coloring contrasts nicely with the bark, which is cinnamon-colored.
When mature, feijoas are hardy to about 15 degrees, though they are considerably more frost sensitive when young, as I discovered in mid-December, when my largest plants were left out a little too long, and suffered some frost burn on the youngest leaves, with some limpness in the branches. However, I also discovered that they are very resilient, shaking off the superficial damage within a day, with no serious or permanent injury. Likewise, they are intolerant of extreme heat, entering some degree of dormancy at 90 degrees (they will remain healthy, but visible growth will come to an absolute stop until temperatures cool off); temperatures over 100 will do serious damage. Growing them out of doors in North Carolina would be a major gamble both in winter and summer, except in coastal locations. Their modest size makes them excellent container plants however!









