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A dalandan is generally thought to be a cross from the Pomelo and Mandarin orange fruits. The dalandan has a green or sometimes a red-orange skin, which when you peel the skin off, will reveal a fruit which generally looks like an orange. While it is regularly sweet, the fruit has a sour taste. [2] The dalandan also contains yellowish juice sacks.
Jack Fruit is the national fruit of Bangladesh and is widely cultivated in tropical regions of Bangladesh. Brazil: Cupuaçu: Theobroma grandiflorum [citation needed] Belgium: Apple: Malus domestica [citation needed] Bulgaria: Apple: Malus domestica [citation needed] Cambodia: Chicken egg banana (chek pong moan in Khmer) Musa aromatica [11]
Mazafati (Persian: مضافتی; [1] or mozafati and Bam date; also called muzati in Balochi) is a cultivar of the palm date.It is a dark, soft, fleshy and sweet date of medium size, about 2.5–4.5 cm (1–2 in) with a relatively high moisture content of between 32 and 35%, varying with the time of harvest and the location of the grow.
Physalis angulata is an erect herbaceous annual plant belonging to the nightshade family Solanaceae.Its leaves are dark green and roughly oval, often with tooth shapes around the edge.
Its fruit is a shiny dark brown to almost black pod with four wing like ridges, two hard and woody ridges and two rather soft ridges, the latter two has an edible pulp. [5] The fruit typically hangs at the edges of branches and [ 6 ] inside the pod are tiny rattling black to brownish seeds.
The word Inzari is derived from the word "inzar" (Pushto – a type of fruit, Latin Ficus carica). Inzari is a mountainous area in the district of Nowshera , Nizampur. Sited on rocky soil, Inzari is situated at the foot of the Khattak Mountain Range, adjacent to Cherat and Nowshera.
Hemidesmus indicus, Indian sarsaparilla, is a species of plant found in South Asia.It occurs over the greater part of India, from the upper Gangetic plain eastwards to Assam and in some places in central, western and South India.
The word sheermal is derived from the Persian words شیر (translit. sheer, Sanskrit Kshir) meaning milk, and مالیدن (translit. malidan) meaning to rub or to knead. In a literal translation, sheermal means milk-rubbed. It was introduced to North India by the Mughal emperors during the medieval period.