maaf email atau password anda salah

Amateur Agronomists

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

The Perfect Sweetsop
A civil servant from Buleleng, Bali, self-taught himself how to crossbreed superior seeds. His influence has spread through Java and Bali.

No ordinary sweetsops hung on the trees at the Superior Fruit nursery in Singaraja, Bali. The skin of the fruit was a striking dark red, not green like the usual sweetsops (annona squamosa) found in Indonesia, and neither was it covered in bumps. Instead the surface was smooth with little dots. When it was broken open, the texture of the flesh was more like a common sweetsop, clear white in color. The taste was sweet and creamy like ice cream.

The fruit, also known as sugar-apple, is fairly large. Only two or three make a kilogram. Sweetsops from the nursery contain only a few dozen seeds, an improvement over the common sweetsop which usually has a cumbersome 90 to 100 seeds. While the common variety goes rotten in three days, the crossbred nona sri variety can last for a week.

arsip tempo : 172844790478.

. tempo : 172844790478.

The Perfect Sweetsop
A civil servant from Buleleng, Bali, self-taught himself how to crossbreed superior seeds. His influence has spread through Java and Bali.

No ordinary sweetsops hung on the trees at the Superior Fruit nursery in Singaraja, Bali. The skin of the fruit was a striking dark red, not green like the usual sweetsops (annona squamosa) found in Indonesia, and neither was it covered in bumps. Instead the surface was smooth with little d

...

Subscribe to continue reading.
We craft news with stories.

For the benefits of subscribing to Digital Tempo, See More

The Best Choice

Rp 54.945/Month

Active for 12 Months, Rp 659.340

  • *You Save -Rp 102.000
  • *Guaranteed update of up to 52 Editions of Tempo Magazine

Rp 64.380/Month

Active Every Month Cancel Anytime

  • *Free for the first month if using a Credit Card

See Other Packages

Already a Subscribed? Log in here
To receive daily news by Email, Sign up for Tempo ID.

More Articles

More exclusive contents

  • October 7, 2024

  • September 30, 2024

  • September 23, 2024

  • September 16, 2024

Independent journalism needs public support. By subscribing to Tempo, you will contribute to our ongoing efforts to produce accurate, in-depth and reliable information. We believe that you and everyone else can make all the right decisions if you receive correct and complete information. For this reason, since its establishment on March 6, 1971, Tempo has been and will always be committed to hard-hitting investigative journalism. For the public and the Republic.

Login Subscribe