Pomegranate
Steeped
in history and romance and almost in a class by itself, the pomegranate, Punica
granatum L., belongs to the family Punicaceae which includes only one genus and
two species, the other one, little-known, being P. protopunica Balf. peculiar to
the island of Socotra.
Despite its ancient background, the pomegranate has acquired only a relatively
few commonly recognized vernacular names apart from its many regional epithets
in India, most of which are variations on the Sanskrit dadima or dalim, and the
Persian dulim or dulima. By the French it is called grenade; by the Spanish,
granada (the fruit), granado (the plant); by the Dutch, granaatappel, and
Germans, granatapfel; by the Italians, melogranato, melograno granato, pomo
granato, or pomo punico. In Indonesia, it is gangsalan; in Thailand, tab tim;
and in Malaya, delima. Brazilians know it as roma, romeira or romazeira. The
Quecchi Indian name in Guatemala is granad. The Samoan name is limoni. The
generic term, Punica, was the Roman name for Carthage from whence the best
pomegranates came to Italy.
Description
An attractive shrub or small tree, to 20 or 30 ft (6 or 10 m) high, the
pomgranate is much-branched, more or less spiny, and extremely long-lived, some
specimens at Versailles known to have survived two centuries. It has a strong
tendency to sucker from the base. The leaves are evergreen or deciduous,
opposite or in whorls of 5 or 6, short-stemmed, oblong-lanceolate, 3/8 to 4 in
(1-10 cm) long, leathery. Showy flowers are home on the branch tips singly or as
many as 5 in a cluster. They are 1 1/4 in (3 cm) wide and characterized by the
thick, tubular, red calyx having 5 to 8 fleshy, pointed sepals forming a vase
from which emerge the 3 to 7 crinkled, red, white or variegated petals enclosing
the numerous stamens. Nearly round, but crowned at the base by the prominent
calyx, the fruit, 2 1/2 to 5 in (6.25-12.5 cm) wide, has a tough, leathery skin
or rind, basically yellow more or less overlaid with light or deep pink or rich
red. The interior is separated by membranous walls and white spongy tissue (rag)
into compartments packed with transparent sacs filled with tart, flavorful,
fleshy, juicy, red, pink or whitish pulp (technically the aril). In each sac,
there is one white or red, angular, soft or hard seed. The seeds represent about
52% of the weight of the whole fruit.
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