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3pm snack time

May 09, 2005 - 02:47 PM [ on the run ]
I just got out of the shower and i'm feeling a little bit better. I definitely feel less sweatynasty and the hot water total opened up my sinuses a bit. Now it's time for snacking I had an orange in the fridge that I bought a few weeks ago.. Inside he's orange and red, but mostly red (like a pomegranate). He has a funny name, but I forget what it is. He stains pretty nicely too. Oh and I know it's not a blood orange. It's name was different than that. Got any ideas?

update: thanks to camille's handy article (see comment below), i can now say i'm pretty sure it was a 'Sanguinelli' blood orange. it just wasn't marketed as a blood orange and i didn't know there was more than one kind.

Posted by pocketpig at May 9, 2005 02:47 PM

Comments

Get well for Carol's home cooking tomorrow!
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Blood oranges are old varieties of oranges that until recently were virtually unknown in the U.S., despite our huge citrus industries. The red color of the flesh and juice is the most obvious difference, but there's something more to the flavor as well. Americans traveling in France, Italy or Spain would relish a glass of blood orange juice, sometimes believing it a mixture of regular orange juice with raspberry and other fruit juices.

'Moro' blood orange. The most predictable and colorful of all the blood oranges, 'Moro' is the most popular commercial and home garden variety. Once mature, the exterior shows a bright red blush, and the internal color is deep red. The juice is equally dark.

The fruits are medium-size, easy-to-peel and usually seedless. The tree is vigorous but has a tendency to bear heavy crops in alternate years. Fruits ripen December to March in inland California, Texas and the Gulf Coast; February to May in coastal southern California; November to February in the low-elevation desert; and February to May in northern coastal California.

'Sanguinelli' blood orange. This is a late-ripening blood orange from Spain. The flesh is usually a shade lighter than 'Moro', but skin color is often a stunning cherry red.

Fruits are small- to medium-size and almost egg-shaped. The rind is very smooth but is harder to peel than other blood oranges. Fruits usually contain a few seeds. They ripen March to May in inland California; February to April in Texas, low-elevation deserts, the Gulf Coast and Florida; and April to June in coastal California (both north and south).

'Tarocco' blood orange. These fruits are the largest of all the blood oranges. They ripen after 'Moro' but before 'Sanguinelli'. 'Tarocco' is also generally considered the best-flavored of the three.

Fruits are large and the orange-blushed-with-red rind is smooth, thin and easy to peel. Internal color varies: Sometimes it is plain orange; at other times it is very deep red. Most fruits produce a few seeds. 'Tarocco' is well adapted only to California climates; it is not grown in Texas, the Gulf Coast or Florida. It ripens March to May in coastal California (north and south) and January to March in inland California.

Posted by: camille at May 9, 2005 04:22 PM

i totally saw that article too, how can that NOT be a blood orange?
Hope you're feeling better to it, and don't get the Rapt0rz sick because we already had that going around here to the neighborhood.

Posted by: samshrew at May 9, 2005 07:42 PM

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