Crazy Looking Melons in Algeria - Weird Fruit Explorer

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июл 2024
  • Episode: 698 Melon
    Species: Cucumis melo
    Location: Algiers, Algeria
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Комментарии • 192

  • @thespank993
    @thespank993 Год назад +8

    Just remembered your channel out of nowhere, and wanted to watch it again, I managed to find your channel again by typing "fruit guy"

  • @WhatAboutZoidberg
    @WhatAboutZoidberg Год назад +36

    After growing up with a grandfather who grew his own cantaloupe, I kept trying the store ones for years. It wasn't until i got a house & grwe my own that I finally had a good melon again.

  • @jrcorsey
    @jrcorsey Год назад +30

    Now that I realize you ate all that fruit in one day, I am moved by your sacrifice. Thank you for your service

    • @Atylonisus
      @Atylonisus Месяц назад +1

      He's gonna have the clearest bowels in the Northern hemisphere

  • @Faustobellissimo
    @Faustobellissimo Год назад +51

    The word "canteloupe" applies to a group of cultivars that are quite different from one another, who share an ancestor that came from the Italian village of Cantalupo.
    The one you ate in this video is a Charentais, created in the French region of Charentes, but are also produced in the Maghreb region, due to colonization. The Charentais is hands down the best canteloupe variety. It is ripe when the apex is soft and thin.

    • @lime4328
      @lime4328 Год назад +3

      thank u for expanding my knowledge sir🙌

    • @lyletheisland
      @lyletheisland Год назад +3

      I second the thanks, Mr. Melon Man

  • @kevinsaadi3728
    @kevinsaadi3728 Год назад +6

    i am algerian and i never had it before . we agerians love watermelon the most

  • @telesniper2
    @telesniper2 10 месяцев назад +3

    Yes! More melon, squash, and gourd content!

  • @ShellyS2060
    @ShellyS2060 Год назад +32

    Dude, I think we appreciate what you do, no matter HOW you do it. Thanks for the video. I thought it looked great 👍... old skool is cool

    • @applegal3058
      @applegal3058 Год назад +5

      Yes! I definitely appreciate him filming cool fruits and their places and back stories!

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Год назад +7

      I appreciate that 🙏

    • @wpc456cpw
      @wpc456cpw Год назад +1

      @@WeirdExplorer totally agreed with Shelly!!

  • @tanuxu
    @tanuxu Год назад +9

    Cucurbita ficifolia, it's not sweet because they harvested it under-ripe to cook it as a pumpkin. Otherwise it can be eaten raw as a fruit when fully ripe. It's a very productive plant and even its seeds, leaves and flowers are edible.

    • @wpc456cpw
      @wpc456cpw Год назад +1

      Really cool that it can be a pumpkin or a sweet fruit. Versatile af!

  • @TheWeirdestOfBugs
    @TheWeirdestOfBugs Год назад +13

    I know you're not a fan of melons, but I LOVE seeing them in your vids!

  • @zeideerskine3462
    @zeideerskine3462 Год назад +62

    The herb silphium of ancient Roman fame (not to be confused with the modern genus silphium) has recently been rediscovered in Capadokia, Turkey. Should your travels take you that way, I would be highly interested in a review.

    • @philipilgen7653
      @philipilgen7653 Год назад +11

      You mean Ferula drudeana? I doubt that he will be able to taste it. The plant is categorized as critically endangered. There are a couple hundred plants growing in botanical gardens, so maybe through that, but I'll doubt that he'll get his hands on it.
      Apicius describes a lesser quality substitute, that he might be able to taste: Ferula asafoetida. Though it is described as tasting not nearly as good as silphion.

    • @zeideerskine3462
      @zeideerskine3462 Год назад +3

      @@philipilgen7653 indeed, that is what I mean. Taking some specimen to investigate its culinary and medicinal uses and properties together with some seeds for propagation experiments is normal practice in researching endangered species and actually helps it's survival

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 Год назад +5

      @@zeideerskine3462 ...I like him but "Random RUclipsr who wants to eat it" is not someone you entrust with a critically endangered plant. That's silly. And do you have any source for "Taking critically endangered plants and investigating it's culinary uses" being "normal practice"? That SOUNDS insane on the face of it, so I kinda need more than just you saying it, you know? It doesn't matter what culinary properties it has, they aren't trying to grow it so people can eat it. And even the potential to create incentive for a black market is something to be avoided at all costs, the last thing you want is a bunch of rich assholes trying to steal plants to eat them.

    • @philipilgen7653
      @philipilgen7653 Год назад

      @@zeideerskine3462 As I said: It is already growing in botanical gardens, they propagated it successfully (Yeah!). They already made culinary experiments to gauge if it really may be silphion. The national geographic made an article on it. Search for: "This miracle plant was eaten into extinction 2,000 years ago-or was it?"

    • @SanniSandyBunny2000
      @SanniSandyBunny2000 Год назад +4

      Tasting History, has a wonderful espisode dedicated to this subject and it's culinary use

  • @2000eae
    @2000eae Год назад +6

    Now you should try the super weird watermelon that is very light green in color and have no stripes, found commonly in Algeria.
    I write to you from Turkey, where a similar variety of Watermelon grows wildly in the steppes of the Central Anatolian plateau, but our version is sour and lacks both sweetness and color, whereas in Algeria, it is definitely a “Sweet Watermelon”.

  • @deanna.radiant
    @deanna.radiant Год назад +27

    That cucumber melon looks a lot like "Cooking Melon". Plus it taste very similar to what you described as well. " Cooking Melon is quite popular vegetable in Sri Lanka and locals cook it with spices to eat it with rice.

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  Год назад +5

      that's probably why!

    • @emaaxelwalin1607
      @emaaxelwalin1607 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@WeirdExplorer I think just cause you're unlucky to buy these fruits 😅 the cucumber melon 🍈 you can just made a juice with a few sugar and that's all !

    • @prashanthkamath7437
      @prashanthkamath7437 2 месяца назад

      We have them in India as well. Google Mangalore cucumber. It is used for Sambar, a watery dish that goes with rice.

  • @SpaceMonkeyMDV
    @SpaceMonkeyMDV Год назад +15

    I believe the first melon could be a cucumber melon they are quite popular in morocco as well, they are true melons but are used like cucumbers in salads.

  • @apocalypticachmodio
    @apocalypticachmodio Год назад +5

    No way you're in my country!! I hope you have an amazing stay!!!! The fruits here are quite savoury and sweet, would love to know what u think of them.

  • @user-up4ql2ts4w
    @user-up4ql2ts4w Год назад +2

    I'm from Algeria and those are rare and expensive, we don't usually eat them, I've never eaten them before.
    the majority love the yellow ones in shape of lemon, and other type with web in the skin some call it cantaloupe.

  • @yasseralgeria
    @yasseralgeria Год назад +5

    This is not a really common melon on Algeria , first time I see it tbh ( I'm Algerian ) .
    The common ones comes out in July, august ( natural ones ) .. and are FANTASTIC .
    Excuse me for not giving more useful informations about it cuz I'm not a fruit expert , but I'm sure I'll taste the best melons , cantaloupes and especially watermelons of ur LIFE if u come back in August .
    Have a nice day , enjoy ur journey

  • @ToufikNefouci
    @ToufikNefouci Год назад +2

    I am Algerian, it's the first time I see this fruit !!

  • @turgutbelen6374
    @turgutbelen6374 Год назад +4

    Cherries, figs and peaches are telling me that this video was made in Summer.

  • @maryt8184
    @maryt8184 Год назад +11

    The only way to get ripe fruit in the USA is to grow it yourself.

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 Год назад

      Or farmers markets or farm stands.

    • @johnnyearp52
      @johnnyearp52 Год назад

      It seems harder and harder to get good fruit in the USA (where I live).

    • @terryenglish7132
      @terryenglish7132 Год назад +1

      @@itzel1735 Not here. Peach farmer insisted his rock hard peaches would ripen. They rotted. The farmers must figure people are used to green like at supermarkets.

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 Год назад

      @@terryenglish7132 Sad. I’ve got access to great local farm produce.

  • @shannabolser9428
    @shannabolser9428 Год назад +5

    I have been using butter knives more recently, since I am teaching a young child how to use a knife, and I have learned that they cut quite a bit that I didn't expect it to.

  • @danieljack4901
    @danieljack4901 Год назад +6

    The texture of the first one reminds me Piel de Sapo melon. Have you tried it? I was never a fan of melons too until I tried it. It has no melon flavor which is quite interesting and is more like an advantage to me, and it's perfectly balanced with sweetness, sourness, juiciness and even... It's slightly salty which fits perfectly.

  • @verderandy9161
    @verderandy9161 Год назад +4

    The spotted/ splotched melon kinda reminds me of a Casaba, Piel De Sapo or several of the Turkish type melons. Casaba is never really sweet and picked underripe does have a distinct cumber flavor. Not a fave of everyone but, properly ripened its pretty good to my taste. Am growing the Charentais variety this year as well as Casaba, Crenshaw, Piel De Sapo, Honeydew and a new one to me Branca Do Ribantejo (Portugues) that really impressed me last season. It would be easy to get addicted to melons. Love your videos...Keep em coming!! Randy/GA (USA)

  • @winsomemartinez
    @winsomemartinez Год назад +55

    Cantaloupes and honeydew do definitely ripen (continue to convert starches to sugars) once picked and generally should be ripened. Watermelon does not.

    • @GoldenBoy-et6of
      @GoldenBoy-et6of Год назад +16

      They only do if they're picked after the tendril has fully dried and the fruit is nearly ready to drop from its stem! If you pick it anytime before that it will taste like pure rind all the way through and the only use will be as a big cucumber and you can cook the seeds and they taste just like sunflower seeds!

    • @dylankelley3430
      @dylankelley3430 Год назад +4

      No. They dont.

    • @bconsilio3764
      @bconsilio3764 Год назад +1

      Right!!

    • @sazji
      @sazji Год назад

      @@GoldenBoy-et6of At the end of the season in Greece and Turkey, they pick the unripe ones and pickle them. I'm sure they do it all around the Mediterranean, it just makes sense. And they're delicious!

    • @beatnik6806
      @beatnik6806 Год назад +2

      @@sazji hmm sounds interesting, I might try that. Btw in Russia they pickle watermelon rinds. I really want to try it next time I buy watermelon. It sounds amazing and I love finding use to stuff I usually throw away.

  • @frankmacleod2565
    @frankmacleod2565 Год назад +9

    The Sad Cucumber of Algeria, by William Burroughs. Great book that never existed

  • @SnarkNSass
    @SnarkNSass Год назад +3

    You said Melonee.... I immediately had a flashback of Iron Chef when the lady said she liked the Peaness of a dish🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @EduardoIsSmiling
    @EduardoIsSmiling Год назад +2

    I don't usually eat much fruit but i love watching this channel, and i really feel like i'm travelling with you. keep it up, sir!

  • @catyear75
    @catyear75 Год назад +1

    I am a Huge fan of melons ...! Happy to see you reviewing them ...! Cheers !

  • @markiangooley
    @markiangooley Год назад +4

    For some reason the first melon struck me as a possible substitute for bitter melon in Asian cooking. It is very different but maybe it has a somewhat similar taste and is used in similar ways in North Africa? Just guessing, and I might be quite wrong.

    • @Ihsaan_ASMR
      @Ihsaan_ASMR Год назад +1

      Exactly we use it as a vegetable

  • @lauraMacKinnon321
    @lauraMacKinnon321 Год назад +2

    I really love your video's! 😊

  • @harsha1149
    @harsha1149 Год назад +1

    1st one you tasted, is called Madras Cumcumber or Dosakai /dosekai here in India. They are oblong and there are different types in those too. It grows wild in Southern coast of India especially Andhra pradesh and Tamil Nadu.It used to grow freel in our backyards.
    Its used as vegetable for chutneys, sambar and curries.

  • @radionoakmont7756
    @radionoakmont7756 Год назад +1

    i do love pure good melon flavor like Cantaloupe i call the American ones American Cantaloupes i saw this variety in Gurney's years back in their awesome Catalog's both varieties id love to grow them both one day what an amazing video and that cucumber melon doesn't look all that appetizing but would do good for a very hot day though.

  • @beacheykeen
    @beacheykeen Год назад +4

    Would be interesting to hear you talk about the supermarket "cantelopes" more (if you haven't already)

    • @Tinil0
      @Tinil0 Год назад

      What exactly would you want him to say that you can't find a million other places? Everyone can try it for themselves, and there are countless people talking about it online already given how common it is. It is basically the opposite of a weird fruit that you have to explore to find.

  • @boredshrimp9425
    @boredshrimp9425 Год назад +3

    Aw an Algerian I'm so happy to know you're in Algeria!

  • @Piusplac
    @Piusplac Год назад +2

    Love those melons, they are excellent and sweet like ripe honey melons if almost overriped but taste like cucumber if unriped or green. Export it to austria if its season and selling it at turkish fruit vendors pretty cheap.

  • @futurebeyond3043
    @futurebeyond3043 Год назад +1

    from your description on the taste, sounds like it's similar to a winter melon?

  • @GoldenBoy-et6of
    @GoldenBoy-et6of Год назад +2

    It might be a wild veriety of melon! Alot of wild melon verities and cucumber verities contain super bitter super poisnonous compounds but some have a small enough amount that its only barely bitter so those might just be native melons that people sometimes eat even tho their not that good but probably dont cultivate them!

  • @Evaisa
    @Evaisa Год назад +1

    melon!!! yum! Seeing the inside i thought the pretty one was gonna taste cucumbery, i guess i was right

  • @vineleak7676
    @vineleak7676 Год назад +1

    It has no flavor because it is in the Cucumis melo inodorus group, like canary melon and Christmas melon, they have a very long shelf life (some varieties over 3 months) compared to Cantaloupes but they don't have the musky smell of Cantaloupes.

  • @Lovesausage269
    @Lovesausage269 Год назад

    They sell those cantaloupe melons here in the grocery stores for slightly more than the regular ones. I’ve only been buying them for a few years now. I’m looking forward to seeing them again now that it’s summer

  • @lasam7470
    @lasam7470 Год назад +1

    Algerian here, that's not really a cantaloup it's more of a "gourd" if that makes sense? It grows in the desert and people use it for medicine and to treat animals, we don't consume it as a "fruit"

    • @benladen4415
      @benladen4415 Год назад +1

      Exactly lived in the desert for 8 years and i used to hear people there's saying that it's not eatable

  • @JaymeeAngell222
    @JaymeeAngell222 2 месяца назад

    I absolutely love cantaloupe.

  • @rocketamadeus3730
    @rocketamadeus3730 Год назад

    I thought everything you said right before you said it lol, you and me, on the same wavelength.

  • @MermaidMakes
    @MermaidMakes Год назад

    It’s thanks to you I take the edge off of American chain grocery store bought melons with tajin. I can’t wait for the summer to buy home grown melons at the farmers market again, but you’ve made eating melons during winter in New England bearable! A true MAGA (melons are good again) !!!

  • @kevrosbane
    @kevrosbane Год назад

    interested in knowing if that tast like the white part of watermelon always loved the white part.

  • @algerianrooster2900
    @algerianrooster2900 Год назад

    💚from algeria

  • @terryenglish7132
    @terryenglish7132 Год назад

    I've seen melons in the supermarket that looked and tasted like no.1.

  • @rjhemedes
    @rjhemedes Год назад

    You will see rare/heirloom varieties of melons sold at Farmers Markets or ethnic markets in California, but they are seasonal and quite pricey compared to your typical honeydew or cantaloupe. I will say some of them do taste much better than your typical honeydew or cantaloupe. They can't be sold at mass retailers or large grocery chains because they bruise or spoil too easily since they tend to be much softer on the outside than honeydew/cantaloupe.

  • @frankmacleod2565
    @frankmacleod2565 Год назад +1

    Oh dang, I was expecting an entirely different type of video, with this title. That's ok, I like fruit too

  • @user-cv6rl2qy1g
    @user-cv6rl2qy1g Год назад +3

    I used to work with a guy who would put salt on his fruit. I often thought that was a little strange. Now I think I know why.

    • @LeoLeeGaming
      @LeoLeeGaming Год назад +1

      Because going from salty to sweet makes the sweet, sweeter. That's the reason why salted caramel is so popular. Me personally, I prefer without.

  • @OP-xo8jv
    @OP-xo8jv Год назад

    there is a mexican fruit salad called bionicos its just fruits (cantaloupe, banana+, apple and strawberry) with a watery cream made with half sour cream and half condensed milk and a dash of vanilla extract just load it with that cream mixture and omg.... if you use the cheap sour cream just add a little bit of milk so its a little bit runny and omg i am craving some cantaloupe rn

  • @AussiePharmer
    @AussiePharmer Год назад

    That mottled one that looks like Piel de Sapo, could be Bateekh Samara. Said to be citrusy and cucumber like.

  • @Shakespearept
    @Shakespearept Год назад

    This reminded me that I should grow some melons

  • @WilhelmWilder
    @WilhelmWilder Год назад +2

    I thought this was going to be a TOTALLY different video

  • @MistressOnyaCox
    @MistressOnyaCox Год назад +1

    😂💀 two huge bites and you Protest "I DON'T LIKE IT" then followed by Three More HUGE bites 🤣🤣🤣
    I fuck¡n love ya broski 🤩

  • @mandab.3180
    @mandab.3180 Год назад

    melon is so goooood

  • @titlepending3820
    @titlepending3820 Год назад

    I lived in Algeria for 3 months (Near constantine) and I never saw this melon in the market. I wish I could taste it

    • @pmdxdrk3134
      @pmdxdrk3134 Год назад +1

      I'm algerian and ive never seen that melon in my entire life ;-;

  • @skylerdickson2939
    @skylerdickson2939 Год назад

    I love cantaloupe!

  • @darkmann12
    @darkmann12 Год назад +1

    Really thought it was a gourd/squash/etc at first

  • @prashanthkamath7437
    @prashanthkamath7437 2 месяца назад

    It looks like a roundish Sambar Soute or Mangalore cucumber. The way you describe it it states like one. Rarely eaten raw here.

  • @garrettsgardenplants9818
    @garrettsgardenplants9818 Год назад

    Cucumis melo agrestis var conomon - oriental pickling melon from Serendipity seeds looks like the first one a bit.

  • @loundja7098
    @loundja7098 Год назад +1

    Hello . I'd love to know your opinion as a foreigner about the fruit's flavor here in Algeria. As Algerian that has been to European countries. I found that fruits out there do not have the same flavour intensity as in Algeria. So I'd love to know what do you think about this matter. Thank you

  • @chahineboudemagh9596
    @chahineboudemagh9596 Год назад

    That first fruit in Algeria we call it Shemmam, and it's not really eaten at all, people just buy it to look it and to smell it.

  • @prasanthbodlapati3543
    @prasanthbodlapati3543 Год назад

    the first one is madras cucumber, i think. it is used for cooking in south india

  • @arturocostantino623
    @arturocostantino623 Год назад +3

    It was probably meant for salad with dressing.

  • @DZ-hp5qc
    @DZ-hp5qc 4 месяца назад

    It's like Pumpkin, for cooking.

  • @jaylors5825
    @jaylors5825 Год назад

    Am I saying it wrong is it VegTABull or VEGIABLE or is it one of those words you can so both ways?

  • @richardportman8912
    @richardportman8912 Год назад +1

    Could that first melon be a cooking melon? Maybe the good people of Algeria use it for making preserves or pickles?

  • @atauysal9196
    @atauysal9196 Год назад +1

    WIth melons, it's not a given that it will be as sweet as it's supposed to be. Same type of melon but different vendor can differ a lot. Maybe not in Algeria but it's the case here in Turkey (and most likely you took that into account and asked if the melons you bought were decent ones idk 😃)

  • @loganlogon3720
    @loganlogon3720 Год назад

    0:04 That one in your right hand looks more like a squash than a melon, I swear my grandma has in the past grown squash with the same general shape and mottled yellow-green coloration.🤔

  • @cupideffect
    @cupideffect Год назад

    also try the Judean date

  • @bflogal18
    @bflogal18 Год назад

    “Cantaloupes” in the US are actually Musk melons. (At least according to my grandmother)

  • @jackhuge6054
    @jackhuge6054 Год назад

    Algeria is sixth in the world in the production of watermelons of all kinds

  • @fennex2000
    @fennex2000 11 месяцев назад

    the first one is pumpkin like
    usually you cook it and eat with coscos

  • @KSmithwick1989
    @KSmithwick1989 10 месяцев назад

    So Mutfruit from Fallout originated from Algeria, cool. 😂

  • @alessandromariani3015
    @alessandromariani3015 Год назад

    If you come in italy there are some very special types of cucumbers that look like melons, or the opposite xD i never found such kind of melon anywhere in italy, it's only in Puglia. It's a melon that taste like a cucumber actually.
    It's probably related to this fruit, but is very different.

  • @bobriemersma
    @bobriemersma Год назад

    When I was a kid what we call "cantaloupes" now were always called "muskmelons" (or if you were really country, "mushmelons"). I wonder if the renaming can be blamed on marketing to city folks?

  • @tomaslainas695
    @tomaslainas695 Год назад

    maybe take home seeds of that one for that mate with the orchard

  • @kiea_tash
    @kiea_tash Год назад

    It's like a cucumber, but a sad cucumber :c

  • @richardbidinger2577
    @richardbidinger2577 Год назад

    I wonder if the green melon would be good to add to a salad if it tastes like a cucumber.

  • @saffisaw8128
    @saffisaw8128 Год назад +1

    I'm Algerian never seen that kind of melons in my life maybe it's imported.

  • @kelliott7864
    @kelliott7864 Год назад

    I think you found the elusive salad melon.

  • @z4961
    @z4961 11 месяцев назад

    Try canary melons they are good

    • @WeirdExplorer
      @WeirdExplorer  11 месяцев назад

      here you go! ruclips.net/video/ApDZSqpUJMI/видео.html

  • @jadehobson751
    @jadehobson751 Год назад

    The mottled melon looks more like a wax gourd when you open it.

  • @M_DZ
    @M_DZ Год назад

    All organic and fresh vegetables and fruits.

  • @SkuttleCS
    @SkuttleCS Год назад +3

    Mans found a Devilfruit deadass🍈

  • @SlavicCelery
    @SlavicCelery Год назад

    That first melon is screaming to get pickled like a watermelon rind.

  • @cupideffect
    @cupideffect Год назад

    try to make it

  • @mediocreturbulence5746
    @mediocreturbulence5746 Год назад +2

    FRUIT PILLED

  • @goiterlanternbase
    @goiterlanternbase Год назад

    Bitter in this family means Cucubitacine, which means poison.
    If you barely can taste it, it wont kill you straight on, but at least give you the runners😜

  • @faresmessahli2859
    @faresmessahli2859 Месяц назад

    THAT MELON WOULD BE GOOD FOR SALADS OR JAMS

  • @marcusjochum
    @marcusjochum Год назад

    That first one might just be an old/not highly cultivated cultivar?

  • @mediocreturbulence5746
    @mediocreturbulence5746 Год назад +2

    FRUIT CHAD

  • @h.Freeman
    @h.Freeman Год назад +1

    With melons like honeydew and cantaloupe I smell them on the ends of it smells sweet it will be. The lady in the market says to me "nobodys gonna want the fruit after you've finished squeezing and sniffing them!"
    I don't know how she thinks you're supposed to pick out fruit

    • @johnnyearp52
      @johnnyearp52 Год назад

      My friend from India taught me to pick mangos that way. It works well but unfortunately the mangos where I live rarely smell at all and don't taste very good. When I was a child you rarely could find a mango but when you did they were good.

    • @h.Freeman
      @h.Freeman Год назад +1

      @@johnnyearp52 I do the same...most of the mangoes I find are the tommy Atkins mango and aren't very good at all.

    • @michaelgusovsky
      @michaelgusovsky Год назад +1

      @@h.Freeman the mangos in the stores are selected for length of shelf life, and are rarely good. the small yellow ones (atulfo) are ok.
      if you want good mangos, you have to grow them yourself, or you have to live somewhere that mangos are locally grown, like florida or hawaii.

    • @johnnyearp52
      @johnnyearp52 Год назад +1

      @@michaelgusovsky Atulfo mangos are more likely to be good.
      My favorite fruits are mangos but I rarely bother to buy the tasteless ones available now.

  • @Godshallpasture
    @Godshallpasture 6 месяцев назад

    The first one looks like a Thrace Melon

  • @skeetchildress9232
    @skeetchildress9232 Год назад +1

    really chowing down on that yucky tasting melon lol

  • @golddragonette7795
    @golddragonette7795 Год назад

    I can't eat fruit safely, it makes me really ill (inc culinary veg if not cooked to death) but damn that cantelope looks delicious!!

  • @chloesibilla8199
    @chloesibilla8199 Год назад

    Their not cantaloupes??

    • @codename495
      @codename495 Год назад

      Most “ cantaloupe” isn’t he US is actually a type of muskmelon.

  • @dncviorel
    @dncviorel Год назад

    What do you do for a living? Probably youtube isn't all that you do, if I'm not mistaking. Cheers!

  • @redhakhiati8034
    @redhakhiati8034 11 месяцев назад

    The populare mason in Algeria is yellow how did you miss it look like 🏈

  • @abdelmoumenederoueche3815
    @abdelmoumenederoueche3815 Год назад

    I am Algerian and I have never seen that first melon. I wonder if it's imported