Fabulous Feijoas

Ranked #1,864 in Food & Cooking, #37,222 overall

What's small, green, smooth and soft inside?

The answer is not ET.. I would like to introduce the world (well most of it anyway) to the most scrumptious little green fruit you'll ever try in your life! F E I J O A S !! aka: Pineapple Guava!

Although not native to our country, New Zealand claims Feijoas as our own, and why the hell not! They are afterall the most versitile, resilient, not to mention delicious fruit you'll ever meet!

Since I miss my country so much, I thought I would share a little piece of it with you all... and I love Feijoas! I even found where to buy the seeds here in the USA so come on and join me to grow some and spread there world-wide!

Beware, Feijoas are highly addictive! I remember when I was a kid, sitting with my sisters on the couch, attempting to eat a supermarket bag full of feijoas from the neighbours house! We each had a plate, knife and spoon, and another bag for the skins! Bliss!

So while you enjoy this lovely lens and your mouth waters for feijoas, Soon to come will be a new lens dedicated purely to Feijoa recipes! So stay tuned for more fantasticness from the NZgurugirl's adventures!



The Vital Stats on the Feijoa



Full name: Feijoa sellowiana
Also known as: Pineapple Guava
Origin: Southern Brazil, Colombia, Uruguay & Northern Argentina
Grows: 1 - 7 meters in height, similar to an Olive Tree
Fruit: Small apple size, soft white flesh

Who ever heard of Feijoas?

A brief and hopefully not boring summary of the feijoa.



Feijoa Fruit is a highly delicious, versatile and adaptable fruit, which in the last few years is beginning to pop up on the commercial production radar for many reasons.

New Zealand has an ideal growing climate for the fruit, and you will commonly see Feijoa trees in many people's back yards as it is very robust, requires virtually no care to grow, and it is pretty much pest and disease-resistant.

The feijoa is a smooth green skin, soft-white-flesh, tree-ripening fruit about the size of a small apple. It has a unique flavour that is familiar and liked by most New Zealanders. The skin has many other properties too (more about that later!)

A Video to Explain it all!

Backing up my claim to the world's best fruit!

Feijoa - The Motion Picture
by girlytwizzel | video info

9 ratings | 2,446 views
curated content from YouTube

How to devour a Feijoa

Afterall, I wouldn't want you to do it wrong now would I?

OK, So there is a couple of ways of eating this delicious little morsel.

HARD MAN'S METHOD
If you are 'hard' (manly and tough) in New Zealand lingo, you might just try eating it as it is. (It always pays to wash first of course). Now the problem with this is that the skin is pretty tart and bitter (but you're tough remember)??
Some people do like it this way as it can be a nice contrast from the sweet flesh inside. This can be a good option if it is packed in your lunchbox, or you find some whilst tramping through the bush perhaps.



SLICE AND SCOOP METHOD
OK, if you are normal you will probably eat a feijoa like this. Simply take a small knife and cut the fruit in half. Now that was simple right?
Now take a spoon and scoop out each half, and slide that puppy right on into your pie hole.
If you find yourself without a spoon, usually you can just pinch the end and the majority of the fruit will slide right out.



THE BUTCHERING METHOD
This is only used when Feijoas are to be utilised in cooking situations. As I already mentioned, because a Feijoa is so versitile, they are used in many recipes (see below for more on that).
Back to the method, just take a knife and butcher off the skin so that you are left with a naked feijoa. Now cut, dice, slice, squeeze, juice, cook, grate, whatever tickles your imagination. RIP little feijoa.

Yum Yum for your Tum!

So many health benefits!

Fresh Feijoas are an excellent sourse of Vitamin C, and low in calories and high in minerals, fibre and antioxidants.

I'll include the nutrient stats below, but for now, remember that feijoas have magic antioxidant activity containing proanthocyanins. (Whatever these are, apparently they are very very good for our health - and who doesn't want that huh!).

Many other fruits and vegetables that contain high levels of Proanthocyanins are often bitter tasting; making the great tasting Feijoa that also provides excellent health benefits a natural winner all-round! Yay!

SERVING SIZE INFO ON 1 FEIJOA
Calories 14
Total Fat 0.2g
Saturated Fat 0
Cholesterol 0mg
Sodium 1 mg
Total Carbohydrates 3g
Dietary Fiber 0.6g
Sugars 2.7g
Protein 0.3g
Calcium 4.8g
Potassium 44mg

A true Kiwi Enterprise

Many backyard growers!



Feijoas have forever been a staple in the Kiwi's diet. It is almost a tradition to pick the fruit off the ground from under the tree with the family during it's short season (April - May).

It's a quarter past seven at night and dusk is swiftly falling, but that hasn't discouraged four little entrepreneurs. An hour earlier, they detected that several feijoas had already fallen from the tree in the back yard, and as the kiwi kids rushed outside to gather the treasure and start slurping it, a plan was quickly formed. Out came the plastic bags and a sign was made:



The kids are at the gate, flagging down cars... and these fruity feijoas are selling like hotcakes!!! yessiree, in twenty minutes, the kiddos've made *six* whole dollars!!!

The Mighty Feijoa - goes great with everything!

What can't you make with a feijoa?

As well as being eaten raw as a dessert or in salads, the use for feijoas is almost endless!

They can be cooked in puddings, utilised as pastry fillings, used in fritters, dumplings, fruit cakes, pies and tarts, or employed as flavoring for ice cream, sorbets and drinks. Feijoas are also preserved in syrup in glass jars, or crystallized. Chutney, jam, jelly, conserve, relish, sauce or sparkling wine are also common uses for feijoa.

Below are some well known products that make use of this nifty fruit!

Hubbard's Feijoa Cereal



Bennett's Feijoa Chocolate



Tiptop Feijoa Vibe Iceblocks



Dewinkel Feijoa and Passionfruit Yoghurt



A Range of Feijoa Juices



Not to mention all the non-edible items you can buy with Feijoa's in, soaps, shampoos, body wash, oils... great for gifts for Homesick Kiwi's... hint hint....

Get drunk on Feijoas

Tried and True in New Zealand



So you may know that New Zealander's are world-reknown for their drinking habits. So it's only natural that we would come up with a way to merge our favourite fruit with alcohol! Yes, we've made it into wine, added it to vodka and made liquers from it.... ohhh the possibilities!

Go to any supermarket and you will have no problem finding feijoa wine. Yes, that is wine which uses fermented feijoas instead of grapes. And it's pretty nice too!

42 Below Vodka

The best vodka in the world!

A New Zealand Vodka brand making it's name around the world, 42 Below's name comes from sitting at 42 below latitude on the world map. Pretty clever huh!
Anyway, this company has made a Feijoa flavoured Vodka, which only makes sense really!

To truely appreciate this Kiwi Masterpiece, visit their website by clicking on the bottle below:
***Please remember you must be of drinking age to enter this site***



Also, they have tonnes of TV adverts playing on YouTube, they are hilarious so you HAVE to go check em' out!

Frickin Hilarious!

Which one is the best? You Pick!

Story of 42 Below Vodka 2 points

42 BELOW Vodka "Feijoa" 2 points

42 BELOW Vodka "Bees" 1 point

42 BELOW Vodka "Volcanoe" 1 point

42 Below - Britain 1 point

Send me something!

So many cool feijoa things!

Why don't you give growing a feijoa tree a chance with some seeds, or buy some fresh feijoas - go on, you know you want to!
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Some Handy Links For Ya

NZ Feijoa Growers Association
Information about growing Feijoas Commercially in New Zealand.
New Zealand Feijoas
General info about Feijoas.
42 Below Vodka
The best Vodka on the planet!
Recipezaar
7 Great Feijoa Recipes to try
Australian Feijoas
New Industry of Feijoas for Australia. (They're just copying New Zealand!!)

Are you mad about Feijoas too?

Well then share already!

  • Mike_W Apr 10, 2012 @ 5:41 am | delete
    I love feijoas! Luckily, they are a dime a dozen here in New Zealand :)
  • debbie grimes Oct 19, 2011 @ 12:57 pm | delete
    Love, love, love em. I start watching my little bushy tree in Sept. to see how good the crop is going to be. This year it's loaded. It's supposed to be cold hardy to 19 degrees F, but it has survived much colder temperatures here in south Georgia, USA . I am happy to find out the fruit is good for you, since I'm addicted to them.
  • Mary Rose O'Leary Sep 25, 2011 @ 11:30 am | delete
    My brothers and I used to spend HOURS in the guava tree, picking and eating and filling bags for Mama who loved guavas but wasn't much of a tree-climber. I have a vision etched in my child mind of my brother Paul, bare-chested at the top of the tree, spreading out his arms, looking into the afternoon sun ? the King of the Guava Tree! It was a sacred fruit in our family. That was back in the 60s in a small suburb outside Los Angeles. Of course, we all have guava trees in our yards now, and it's been raining guavas the last week here in LA. But, you know, the real way to eat a guava is to just bite it in half and scoop out the magic inside with your top front teeth.
    I was much older when I discovered that they're really Feijoas and not real guavas at all! Doesn't seem right somehow. They'll always be guavas to us!
  • SuzAnne Jul 19, 2011 @ 1:29 pm | delete
    I have grown up enjoying feijoas, my parents have an 80 year old tree on their property yes here in California in Los Angeles... we make feijoa jam and let me tell you, its fighting time to get these little fruits off the ground scrambling all over to grab them. Its true I remember sitting at the kitchen table with bags and bags ,dividing them up between us kids, cutting the fruit in half and scooping out a little happiness and loving every bite of this fruit.. ahh so sad my mom is going to be selling the property soon since my dad passed away... there is simply no way to move this beast of a tree,, sigh.
  • NZgurugirl Jul 23, 2011 @ 9:37 am | delete
    Wow 80 year old tree, that's amazing! How about sending us some of that yummy jam! :) I'm sorry to hear about your Dad, but i'm sure you'll have fond memories of that tree... make sure you take one last batch off there before you sell it, and explain to the new owners that you can eat them - they might not know and cut it down! That would be miserable!
  • Lya Sep 10, 2011 @ 3:23 am | delete
    Why don't you get some of the feijoas and save the seed before the property is sold? I saved some from a tree which had huge fruit every year. The seedlings are a year old and I will plant them out next year. Even if the place has already sold, you could approach the new owners and ask if you could get some feijoas when they are ripe?
  • Leon, Sydney Australia Nov 4, 2011 @ 10:11 am | delete
    If you haven't already sold the place - you can transplant the tree - if you're happy to do without fruit the year after you transplant.... and you will have to be a little brutal. Just cut the tree off about 2ft above the ground (chainsaw will work) - seal with pruning paste/tar. Use a shovel to cut down and under a circle 4ft circle with the trunk in the middle. Try to get about a foot of dirt directly below the the trunk. Feijoas are surface feeders, so any larger roots are really more for stabilising, and over time will regrow. Cover with sack-cloth or an old sheet. Make sure you keep the rootball wet, especially keep the roots near the surface cool (Keep covered until replanted). Ensure the hole is oversized and has a bit of blood and bone (or similar, but only a bit) mixed in with garden or potting mix in the bottom and sides of the hole. Put some mulch (6" of grass clippings is good) over the hole area. Keep watered.

    In spring you will get a heap of new shoots coming up straight from the sides of the trunk near the top, probably no fruit the first year. For several years thereafter you should get the hugest fruit (perhaps not lots though until the tree regrows).

    Remember that many feijoa cultivars are not self-fertile, however if the tree was the only one within 200 yards, you probably have a variety that is self-fertile. Depending on where you plant it though, you may need to hand-pollinate the flowers (unless there are medium sized birds in your new place that land in the tree - they are the primary pollinators as bees are not attracted to feijoa flowers).

    I hope this helps (I have been growing a feijoa research orchard in Sydney for 14 years).
  • feijoainmypooh May 14, 2011 @ 12:53 am | delete
    I have loved feijoas all my life.We used to have a tree in my backyard and i ate them everyday i could! So many people I know have never tried a feijoa or heard of one,I was discusted when I purchased some from New world and the checkout operator asked me what they were!!!! love this site tehehe
  • Hinterland Feijoas May 12, 2011 @ 1:08 am | delete
    We are so mad about feijoas we planted 700 of them on the Sunshine Coast behind Noosa in Australia - we are Hinterland Feijoas - see our website for where to buy them and check out of range of fabulous Feijoa Jams. The Australians are going Feijoa mad too now! www.hinterlandfeijoas.com.au (We are under registration for organic certification too)
  • Elizabeth May 11, 2011 @ 5:38 am | delete
    I have only recently started eating Feijoa and I am totally addicted! I have eaten 2 kilos today.
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A bitta bloggin for ya Feijoa freaks!

Feijoa frenzy

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NZgurugirl

Hey guys and gurls! I'm a 26yr old Kiwi Girl living in the USA with my hot fiance who is a deputy sheriff. I'm a teacher, and love to paint, cook, wa... more »

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