| Encanto Farms Nursery > Categories > Fig Flavor Categories |
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Hermitian
Registered: Posts: 135 |
Among the seasoned growers and tasters of figs, most know there are categories of fig flavors. The flavors are so varied that I believe any discussion of "best tasting fig" should be qualified with "best tasting fig in flavor category xxx".
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BronxFigs
Registered: Posts: 1,864 |
Hello Richard- |
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bigbadbill
Registered: Posts: 376 |
Hi, |
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figpig_66
Registered: Posts: 2,678 |
For a simpler way for newbies it should go by color |
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bigbadbill
Registered: Posts: 376 |
Yeah. I hear you, Richie. Unfortunately, some light skinned figs (yellows and greens) can be very different flavored: such as sugar (caramel), honey (super sweet and light), or adriatic (berry). So the interior governs the taste rather than the exterior (skin) if that makes sense. |
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jkuo
Registered: Posts: 156 |
I believe Pete posted the original flavor grouping thread. |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
I would add Marylane Seedless to the Honey group. That fig drips honey! Delicious! |
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figpig_66
Registered: Posts: 2,678 |
Suzi my wife likes figs but not the seeds is this a really sweet fig? Been looking at the different seedless but know nothing about there flavor. I have Trees but all have seeds. |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
Richard, it does have a little crunch, so it's not completely seedless. It's one of my favorites. It's very sweet and juicy. |
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AltadenaMara
Registered: Posts: 375 |
I would like to thank everyone here who took the trouble to analyze and share specifically what they were tasting. These divisions of flavor are really helpful for people like myself shopping for which figs to grow. In the past, I tend to "eat" with my eyes and think: pretty picture, good/not good or sweet/not sweet and wind up with several trees that all taste the same, missing out on some really unique and exquisite flavors. For example, someone described Pastilliere as tasting like fruit jam having a slight mulberry taste. I love mulberries, so that was one of my “must have” fig trees. Dividing the sweet “Honey Fig” flavor into a honey flavor and a sugar/brown sugar/molasses/ even light maple flavor seems more precise and helpful. Was the flavor watery or intense? Saying if it has a strong fig flavor or a mild fig flavor is also helpful for us “selling” these to family and friends who don’t like figs. All the fruit flavors aren’t just strawberry. Dividing it into Adriatic Berry and Bordeaux Berry “rich with slightly complex additional flavors” and even “Exotic Berry’, whatever that means, is even more helpful. Also describing whether it’s more acid or sub-acid is helpful. Thanks again to everyone here for all this detail about the taste in figs. I started out wanting just one or two fig trees, realized that it would be fun to have one or more of each flavor, and wind up with many more than I intended. |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
Maybe just three: Brown Turkey, Black Madeira and Other? |
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figpig_66
Registered: Posts: 2,678 |
[QUOTE=DesertDance]Richard, it does have a little crunch, so it's not completely seedless. It's one of my favorites. It's very sweet and juicy. |
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Hermitian
Registered: Posts: 135 |
[QUOTE=AltadenaMara] ... All the fruit flavors aren’t just strawberry. ... [/QUOTE] |
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armando93223
Registered: Posts: 1,164 |
Yea I don't want to have fig trees that taste alike...... I am limited for the moment...LOL |
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DesertDance
Registered: Posts: 4,518 |
A wine lover, I've always asked for members here to describe the flavor profile, like a wine connoisuer would... Deep, Rich berry flavor with a slight nutty crunch and notes of perfume and citrus and an aftertaste of pure sweet honey....... This is a dream. It will never happen. |
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figherder
Registered: Posts: 237 |
From what I have seen the flavor profile varies depending on climate grown, age of the tree and of course taste buds of the person tasting. was it picked a day or 2 early? was it raining, wet, sunny, humid? |
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pitangadiego
Registered: Posts: 5,447 |
figherder hits the nail on the head. Throw in caprification, temperature, soil, fertilizer, and anything else that you can throw. |
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Hermitian
Registered: Posts: 135 |
[QUOTE=figherder]From what I have seen the flavor profile varies depending on climate grown, age of the tree and of course taste buds of the person tasting. was it picked a day or 2 early? was it raining, wet, sunny, humid? |
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Speedmaster
Registered: Posts: 385 |
I have a fig that tastes like a strong cantelope with honey and its sweetness burns sometimes. It has an aftertaste of nuts and a juicy sugar syrup. Something like that. Not all from the same tree taste this good. This season only 7 or 6 tasted this good. Tree is 2 years old and improved so much. |
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