| THIS tropical fruit is so-called from its
resemblance in form and appearance to the cones of some
species of pine. Its botanical name in most general use
is Ananassa sativa, but some botanists who do
not regard it as distinct from Bromelia, call it
B. ananas. The Bromeliaceae, to which
it belongs, are a small family of endogenous plants,
quite closely related to the canna, ginger, and banana
families, and differing from them in having nearly
regular flowers and six stamens, all perfect. As the
pineapple has become naturalized in parts of Asia and
Africa, its American origin has been disputed, but there
is little doubt that it is a native of Brazil, and
perhaps some of the Antilles, now a part of the domain of
the United States. This fruit is a biennial, with the
habit of the Aloe, but with much thinner leaves. In
cultivation it early produces seeds but, in ripening, the
whole flower cluster undergoes a remarkable change; all
parts become enormously enlarged, and when quite ripe,
fleshy and very succulent, being pervaded by a saccharine
and highly flavored juice. Instead of being a fruit in
the strict botanical sense of the term, it is an
aggregation of accessory parts, of which the fruit proper
forms but a very small portion. The first pineapples known in England were sent as a present to Oliver Cromwell; the first cultivated in that country were raised in about 1715, though they were grown in Holland in the preceding century. The successful cultivation of the fruit was early considered one of the highest achievements in horticulture, and the works of a few years ago are tediously elaborate in their instructions; but the matter has been so much simplified that anyone who can command the proper temperature and moisture may expect success. For many years pineapples have been taken from the West Indies to England in considerable quantities, but the fruit is so inferior to that raised under glass that its cultivation for market is prosecuted with success. |
The
largest fruit on record, as the produce of the English
pineries, weighed fourteen pounds and twelve ounces.
Better West Indian pineapples are sold in our markets
than in those of England, as we are nearer the places of
growth. The business of canning this fruit is largely pursued at Nassau, New Providence, whence many arc also exported whole. The business has grown greatly within a few years, and now that the United States is in possession of the West Indian islands, exportations may be expected to increase and the demand satisfied. More than fifty varieties of the pineapple are enumerated. The plant is evidently very variable, and when South America was first visited by Europeans, they found the natives cultivating three distinct species. Some varieties, with proper management, will be in fruit in about eighteen months from the time the suckers are rooted. The juice of the pineapple is largely used in flavoring ices and syrups for soda-water; the expressed juice is put into bottles heated through by means of a water bath and securely ,corked while hot. If stored in a cool place it will preserve its flavor perfectly for a year. The unripe fruit is very acrid, and its juice in tropical countries is used as a vermifuge. The leaves contain an abundance of strong and very fine fibers, which are sometimes woven into fabrics of great delicacy and lightness. |
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| Nor is it every apple I desire; Nor that which pleases every palate best; Tis not the lasting pine that I require, Nor yet the red-cheeked greening I request, Nor that which first beshrewed the name of wife, Nor that whose beauty caused the golden strife. No, no! bring me an apple from the tree of life. C. C. M. |