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Muddle a few kumquats with simple syrup, pour two ounces of gin over ice in a glass, top with tonic water, and strain the kumquat syrup into the glass, says Jaramillo. Garnish with a kumquat slice.
The citrangequat (Citrus × georgiana) is a citrus hybrid of a citrange and a kumquat, developed by Walter Swingle at Eustis, Florida, in 1909. [1] Citrangequats are bitter in taste, but are considered edible by some at the peak of their maturity. Three named cultivars exist:
A raw kumquat is 81% water, 16% carbohydrates, 2% protein, and 1% fat (table). In a reference amount of 100 grams (3 + 1 ⁄ 2 ounces), raw kumquat supplies 296 kilojoules (71 kilocalories) of food energy and is a rich source of vitamin C (53% of the Daily Value), with no other micronutrients in significant content (table).
Citrus margarita, the oval kumquat [4] or Nagami kumquat, [5] [6] is a species of kumquat; [1] a type of citrus fruit in the genus Citrus, family Rutaceae. [7] Its epithet, margarita, is Latin for pearly. [8] It is first described by the Portuguese botanist João de Loureiro in 1790, in his Flora cochinchinensis under the name Citrus margarita.
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Citrofortunella varieties (left to right): Jiangsu kumquat, calamansi, limequat, mandarinquat Citrofortunella are a large group of commercial hybrids that cross the kumquat with other citrus. In the system of citrus taxonomy established by Swingle, kumquats were placed in a different genus, Fortunella , from Citrus , which included citron ...
Citrus crassifolia, the Meiwa kumquat, is a species of kumquat; [2] a type of citrus fruit in the genus Citrus, family Rutaceae. It was first described by the American botanist Walter Tennyson Swingle in 1915 as Fortunella crassifolia. [1] Initially, C. crassifolia was described as a synonym of Citrus japonica. [3]
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