Thursday, 29 July 2010

Pengenalan Buah-Buahan Tempatan (2)

Asam Aur Aur (Garcinia parvifolia)

** Pokok boleh mencapai 10 m tinggi dan mempunyai kanopi yang padat.
** Hujung daun kecil berbentuk akuminat manakala pangkal daun berbentuk kuneat, berwarna 
     hijau tua, berkilat dan tepi daun sedikit beralun.
** Bunganya kecil berwarna merah
** Buah kecil berbentuk bulat, berwarna hijau semasa muda dan bertukar menjadi merah cerah
     atau merah keungguan apabila matang.
** Isi berwarna putih
** Rasanya masam masam manis dan berjus.
** Isinya boleh di makan segar dan dibuat jem manakala kulit buah yang matang boleh dijadikan asam untuk masakan setelah dikeringkan.



Semua Gambar dan rujukan di ambil dari:
Buku Panduan Buah-Buahan Brunei. Diterbitkan oleh: Jabatan Pertanian, Kementerian Perindustrian dan Sumber-sumber Utama ; Negara Brunei Darussalam.

Thursday, 15 July 2010

Pengenalan Buah-buahan Negara Brunei Darussalam (1)

Yesterday, my brother attended the invitation by the Agriculture Department and took back few souvenirs including poskad with variety of traditional fruits of Brunei which some I just first seen but all is in Malay Language. All the information and pictures below is not belongs to Syarikat Ladang Juang but belongs to the Brunei  Department of Agriculture.
The aim of publish this post is to let other what is the origin fruits of Brunei Darussalam. All the description is purely in Brunei Malay Language which I got from the postcard.

Kembayau (Canarium Odontophyllum)

Pokok didapati tumbuh di kawasan yang terlindung sedikit. Buah yang biasanya berbentuk bujur berwarna putih kemudian bertukar merah dan akhirnya hitam apabila matang. Isi ada yang berwarna putih pudar dan ada yang berwarna kuning.


Bijinya keras berbentuk bujur bersegi-segi dan tajam di kedua-dua hujung.











   

2. Pengalaban (Litsea garciae )

 
Tanaman yang mengeluarkan buah di dahan-dahan pokok. Buah berbentuk bulat, berwarna kirim hijau kilat dan bertukar merah jambu apabila masak. Isinya bertektur halus serta mempunyai rasa yang lemak.

Saturday, 10 July 2010

Langsat " Lansium domesticum"

DISTRIBUTION

Lansium duranum was originally native to the Malaysian peninsula and known locally as Langsat.

Agriculturally, the tree is grown throughout the entire Southeast asian region, ranging from Southern India to the Philippines for its fruit. In the Philippines, where it is locally referred to as the lanzones or langsa, the plant is grown mostly on the southern parts of the island of Luzon, especially in Paete, Laguna, due to the species' narrow range of conditions favorable to its survival. It is also found in abundance on Northern Mindanao particularly in places as Butuan, Cagayan de Oro, and Camiguin. The Camiguin variety is especially sweet and succulent.

In Indonesia, Langsat is very popular fruit in West Kalimantan (Pontianak, Indonesia) and South Sumatra (also called 'Duku'). In Sarawak, northern Borneo, the name Duku is reserved for the larger-sized varieties of Langsat, near the size of golf balls, claimed sweeter and with less sap in the peel. A variety called Dokong exported to mainland Malaysia from Thailand grows tighter in the clusters, giving it a faceted shape, and is preferred by many over the standard Langsat.

Within mainland Asia, the tree is cultivated in Thailand (Thai: ลางสาด, langsat), Cambodia, Vietnam and India, as well as its native Malaysia. Outside the region, it has also been successfully transplanted and introduced to Hawaii and Surinam. It grows well in the wetter areas (120 inches/3 meters or more annual rainfall) of Costa Rica, where it is still very rare, having been introduced decades ago by the United Fruit Company. A major hindrance to its acceptance seems to be that it is very slow in bearing, said to take 12 years from seed. However, air layering from mature trees, as well as grafting, are said to work well and produce much faster.

Fruit

Fruits are ovoid, roundish orbs around five centimeters in diameter, usually found in clusters of two to thirty fruits along the branches and trunk. Each round fruit is covered by yellowish, thick, leathery skin. Underneath the skin, the fruit is divided into five or six slices of translucent, juicy flesh. The flesh is slightly acidic in taste, although ripe specimens are sweeter. Green seeds are present in around half of the segments, usually taking up a small portion of the segment although some seeds take up the entire segment's volume. In contrast with the sweet-sour flavor of the fruit's flesh, the seeds are extremely bitter. The fruit taste has been compared to a combination grape and "perfect" grapefruit with no bitterness. Yet the seeds if bitten have the bitterness of a grapefruit yet stronger. The sweet juicy flesh contains sucrose, fructose, and glucose.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lansium_domesticum