Be careful when eating this fruit!

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  • Опубликовано: 5 дек 2022
  • Be careful when eating persimmon! Depending on the type of persimmon, you will want to eat it at different points when it ripens.
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Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @Jeanelleats
    @Jeanelleats  Год назад +6356

    Try biting into a Hachiya persimmon while it's still firm 👀 have you tried both of these persimmons yet?

    • @brainrot__
      @brainrot__ Год назад +23

      No, but I'd like to!

    • @rochellec2882
      @rochellec2882 Год назад +56

      Yes and I prefer it that way, not super firm like how you said you ate it but medium and it is actually my favourite like that. I heard it can give you ab bit of a stomach ache but I feel fine whenever I eat it. Maybe everyone else should be a bit cautious though.

    • @rochellec2882
      @rochellec2882 Год назад +11

      Oh and by the way I hate it when it's soft.

    • @kkbroski
      @kkbroski Год назад +1

      No, I’ve only tried the second one. Is it good???

    • @nonime9566
      @nonime9566 Год назад +17

      I eat it firm/medium too, I can't even imagine eating it that soft and mushy. I like it firm and it doesn't give me tummy aches.

  • @chocollaCheese
    @chocollaCheese Год назад +9342

    Her : "Fuyu is more firm and Hachiya is super squishy"
    My fried brain at first second : *tomato?*

    • @sekargambuh2737
      @sekargambuh2737 Год назад +91

      I'm too

    • @sosobeautiful7
      @sosobeautiful7 Год назад +68

      same here lol

    • @raysaga
      @raysaga Год назад +68

      glad im not the only one

    • @Amphoris
      @Amphoris Год назад +29

      Yo same💀

    • @Uapa500
      @Uapa500 Год назад +24

      Not too far from the pulp of the tomato as for consistency really 😀

  • @louvecis
    @louvecis Год назад +13449

    I'm eating the soft one rn and it tastes really good ngl. You can make some non-cooked pudding with it just by adding only cacao inside.

    • @anwar-ri9br
      @anwar-ri9br Год назад +24

      4"69"th like

    • @louvecis
      @louvecis Год назад +11

      @@anwar-ri9br woah

    • @anwar-ri9br
      @anwar-ri9br Год назад +8

      500th like now 😭

    • @lunaballuna
      @lunaballuna Год назад +54

      I just can't get over that slimy texture it has. Bleh. I love the small round ones though :) I never let them get brown inside and like them crunchy like apples 😋

    • @yagoobydooby
      @yagoobydooby Год назад +8

      or make persimmon cookies

  • @LeoLeeGaming
    @LeoLeeGaming 6 месяцев назад +512

    Fuyu doesnt always have brown flesh. That usually occurs when its overipe. The hachiya you showed is also super ripe. I like em less aged than that.

    • @alexis6399
      @alexis6399 5 месяцев назад +5

      Yes!! thats why i like hachiya better

    • @2intrigued669
      @2intrigued669 5 месяцев назад +12

      Exactly. She allowed the seeds to harden. Weird

    • @athanasia03
      @athanasia03 5 месяцев назад +12

      Persimmons are the best when it still crunchy

    • @narjeshaghjoo8460
      @narjeshaghjoo8460 4 месяца назад

      In iran we say ,khormaloo, its so delicious

    • @TJMluca
      @TJMluca 2 месяца назад +1

      Nah it’s a different type of species

  • @PhoenixBorealis
    @PhoenixBorealis 7 месяцев назад +163

    A much smaller variety grows wild here, and I love picking them in the fall. I even made persimmon bread at the suggestion of a fellow forager, and it turned out so tasty!

    • @SY-ok2dq
      @SY-ok2dq 7 месяцев назад +10

      Is that in the U.S.? Is it the native American persimmon? Diospyrus americana is the botanical name, I believe. And I think there's another American variety as well, which is native to America.

    • @vegaset4038
      @vegaset4038 7 месяцев назад +15

      ​@@SY-ok2dqIdk about his, but when I was growing up, in Indiana, we had a persimmon tree that produced orange fruit about the size of strawberries. When picked at the right time, they were squishy and sweet, but it still made my mouth feel dry if I ate too many.
      We would take the seeds and cut them open. Inside, you would see the "embryo" and we would use it to "predict" the coming winter weather. If it looked like a fork, winter would be warm with little snow or frost, if it looked like a knife, it xould kean winter would be mild, chilly with some snowfall. But if it was shaped like a spoon, it could mean winter was going ro he harsh,very cold with above average snowfall.

    • @PhoenixBorealis
      @PhoenixBorealis 6 месяцев назад +4

      @@SY-ok2dq Yes, that's it! They're really good! :3

    • @milliex58
      @milliex58 2 месяца назад

      Persimon bread😮? I need that recipe

    • @hannahthufvesson
      @hannahthufvesson 2 месяца назад

      ​@@milliex58Seconded! ☺️

  • @thatgirl1887
    @thatgirl1887 Год назад +3296

    It looks like a tasty tomato but don't let it Fuyu 🍅 😂

  • @AutisticAthena
    @AutisticAthena Год назад +2706

    My college roommate's mom would send him Permissions and kimchi, and he would get excited if the box was wet and leaking because it meant that the persimmons were ripe. He would tear the box open and sit cross legged in front of the coffee table and alternate between bong rips and bites. He would leave a sticky mess every where, but nobody bugged him about it because he was all the way across the country from his mom.

    • @Itsunclegabby
      @Itsunclegabby Год назад +310

      It's so sweet that you held onto this memory. 🙂

    • @MeowMeow_95_
      @MeowMeow_95_ Год назад +34

      Aw😊

    • @recipesrecreated9654
      @recipesrecreated9654 Год назад +31

      Love this

    • @AutisticAthena
      @AutisticAthena Год назад +129

      @Harley Quinn I haven't spoken to him in years, but I have a feeling that if they're both well, they're doing fine. He was a little bit lacking in motivation at the time, but overall a really good kid. Super chill. Wish I had been in a better place when I met him, we'd probably still be friends.

    • @AutisticAthena
      @AutisticAthena Год назад +40

      @@HarleyQuinn-gu1kn Don't do that to yourself!!! College is different. You get to PICK your classes, you can decide what your schedule looks like, who you associate with. I know that it's hard, but maybe childhood isn't supposed to be the best part of everyone's lives... Maybe you're just a late bloomer and you're missing out on YOUR chance to get better and get what you want. Starting with online classes is great for a START, but don't resign yourself to NEVER being able to do it. Try saying "not YET" instead of "not EVER".

  • @sheonyx
    @sheonyx 7 месяцев назад +28

    Hachiya are my favorite!! They grow in the Mediterranean as well and they're such a treat

    • @aabderrahmane
      @aabderrahmane 4 месяца назад

      same! they taste amazing but ive never seen one with a pit before😭

    • @redbamb9392
      @redbamb9392 2 месяца назад

      My great grandmother was armenian/georgian and she used to feed me those when i was young!

  • @madonnayoussef8943
    @madonnayoussef8943 7 месяцев назад +17

    Hi, I'm Egyptian and we are eating the Hachiya one all the time.
    I was surprised when I knew about the Fuyu one and wish to try it.
    A tip for picking the ripe sweet Hachiya is dark orange with no lighter spots. also you can remove the green part and eat it as sucking it.

    • @Selmaibeauty
      @Selmaibeauty 3 месяца назад +1

      Yesss I live in Egypt too and I was in the comments looking for an Egyptian 😂
      It's called kaki here and it's so yummy

  • @shonnyhd8946
    @shonnyhd8946 Год назад +1251

    If you’ve ever mistakenly got deodorant on your tongue before that’s what eating a unripe Hachiya persimmon is like

    • @justfornowforever418
      @justfornowforever418 Год назад +82

      Yes that's exactly what it tastes like when it's not ripe, good description.

    • @old_fashiontouch
      @old_fashiontouch Год назад +37

      I- still don’t know what it tastes like yet even with this

    • @zethid4895
      @zethid4895 Год назад

      I'm gonna spray some deodorant and taste it brb
      Edit:it feels starchy, almost bitter like unripe banana and the frangrance in the deodorant linger in your mouth

    • @old_fashiontouch
      @old_fashiontouch Год назад +9

      @@zethid4895 oml u actually did it lmao

    • @shonnyhd8946
      @shonnyhd8946 Год назад +2

      @@zethid4895 lol 😭 nooo

  • @Frodo.Baggins.
    @Frodo.Baggins. 5 месяцев назад +11

    Try freezing hachiya persimmons. Then use a spoon to scoop it up.

  • @shawniacano1675
    @shawniacano1675 7 месяцев назад +3

    The 2nd one is how north American wild persimmons are, they're a lot smaller but you basically have to wait until they get so soft they are almost rotten

  • @Eddy-fn9qt
    @Eddy-fn9qt Год назад +1237

    If you freeze the second persimmon and let it thaw just a bit before eating, it tastes so good and it’s perfect to eat on a hot summer day! I remember eating it like that at my grandparents house in Korea and it’s so good 🤗

    • @jessicaevans2564
      @jessicaevans2564 Год назад +16

      Ooo, thank you for that idea!

    • @m-ilydoesstuff
      @m-ilydoesstuff 11 месяцев назад +6

      Omg that's how my parents eat them during the summer as I grew up ( I'm korean)

    • @beagc2859
      @beagc2859 7 месяцев назад +12

      Where I live is a winter fruit. Trees have dropped all their leaves but fruits are still tight up there, not even snow can disturb them

    • @arturoone77
      @arturoone77 7 месяцев назад +3

      They grow in the summer in korea? So lucky!! Winter/autumn is the season in Spain 😢

    • @lunaballuna
      @lunaballuna 7 месяцев назад +10

      They grow wild here in the southern United States and I wait patiently each fall/early winter for them to start dropping and will collect them every day to make sure I get them before birds and bugs do. You have to eat them very similarly to how you'd eat Hachiya and wait until mushy! I usually dry them out to make something similar to a dried fruit/ candy snack 😊 or you can make jams/jellies, use them to make sweet breads, make ice cream with them (my mom does this), add them to pancake or waffle mix (my favorite way to use them!) for a fall breakfast treat, make cakes with them, make cupcakes or muffins, incorporate them into icing, make smoothies, make cobblers, use in different pie fillings (one thats actually pretty good that I've tried is a pumpkin persimmon pie and a strawberry persimmon pie), use them in honemade poptarts, jellos, and add them scooped raw on top of different foods like fruity ice cream/breads/cakes/crackers/fruit and yogurt bowls/etc, or just eat them by themselves ❤ just some examples I've seen done in the state I live in! Enjoy 😉

  • @LT-jr3yb
    @LT-jr3yb Год назад +1571

    I have never heard of this in my life, I thought it was a tomato at first 😂

  • @jackielam3942
    @jackielam3942 2 месяца назад

    I’m glad that the first impressions with the hachiya persimmon seem to be universal. I thought it was dying when I first ate it

  • @butpookie
    @butpookie 7 месяцев назад +4

    I’m not sure what kind of persimmon it was, but the first time I had a persimmon, I was at a park in Northwest Arkansas with my family, and my Grandpa and my uncle were throwing sticks at a persimmon tree in hopes of knocking some down. I ended up getting some for myself, and got to literally taste the fruits of my labour. It was so sweet and delicious! :)

  • @camillacelotto5524
    @camillacelotto5524 Год назад +456

    Here in Italy the super soft one is the norm. I remember when I was in high school and brought the harder kind at school once and my friend were super weirded out by it because they had never seen it 😂

    • @crowsoto9612
      @crowsoto9612 Год назад +11

      same for me except I'm from south america, didn't know the firmer fruit existed until now

    • @liliflafi5644
      @liliflafi5644 Год назад +3

      have you ever tried freezing them a bit They are like natures icecream.

    • @giannaberetta878
      @giannaberetta878 Год назад

      @@liliflafi5644 YES! I do it sometimes! They're delicious ❤️

    • @ineshomemcardoso5762
      @ineshomemcardoso5762 Год назад +2

      same in Portugal

    • @talete7712
      @talete7712 Год назад

      ​@@liliflafi5644 I've never heard about doing it, but I like them a lot so I'll definitely try :)

  • @Legendaryrobot64
    @Legendaryrobot64 Год назад +406

    Damn never knew about this. Pretty sure I grew up eating the hachiya type since everyone said if you don’t wait until a persimmon is fully soft and ripe it won’t be sweet at all and will leave a weird taste in your mouth. Was really surprised when I eventually tried the fuyu type and finding out it would be sweet and crunchy before it turns completely ripe

  • @Cuppycakequeen4444
    @Cuppycakequeen4444 7 месяцев назад +1

    Persimmons are my absolute most favorite fruit. Growing up my grandma and grandpa had a persimmon tree that grew Hachiya persimmons. For years it was the only kind that I knew existed. Now though, visiting the persimmon museum in Japan is literally on my bucket list. 🤣

  • @I.Is.Cheeky.
    @I.Is.Cheeky. 7 месяцев назад +2

    I've only ever eaten a Hachiya persimmon! In fact we have some Hachiya persimmon in my house rn, we are just waiting for them to be ready so we can eat them

  • @-Reagan
    @-Reagan Год назад +309

    Tips: persimmons continue to ripen after they’re picked! Sort of like avocado does. Put them in a dark place - preferably in a paper bag, at room temperature but even a dark shelf outside of the fridge is fine.
    The paper bag holds in the ethylene gas as it ripens, which makes it ripen quicker!
    I’ve mostly had hachiya - maybe fuyugaki once in my life. My dad warned me and taught me well how to eat them.
    The Rules:
    1) ALWAYS wait until it’s soft. Squishy soft. It will feel like an almost rotten tomato. When you think it’s about soft enough, wait one more day.
    2) ALWAYS peel it, because the skin is also very astringent and the skin and leaves can cause stomach distress.
    3) NO holes 🕳 but small black spots are fine! They don’t affect the fruit itself it’s just sunspots from hanging on the tree
    Still, as a kid there were a few times when I made the mistake of eating hachiya persimmon slightly underripe. It’s a delicate balance between astringent as rubbing alcohol, edible and sweet, and rotten. There’s a perfect sweet spot before it’s unbearably pungent/fermented, but when it’s soft to the touch - like squishy soft.
    It’s really best just to wait, though bc you’ll never ever forget how stringent it is and how much it hurts like your tastebuds literally dry up and shrink away from it screaming and grabbing each other for comfort - and if it’s doing that to your mouth, just think about what it’s about to be doing to the rest of your esophageal tract and stomach! I can tell you from experience... if you are curious, (just ask me or Janelle, don’t try it, yourself! 😅)

    • @domotemujin7780
      @domotemujin7780 Год назад +12

      This is such a great comment.... but the 'screaming and grabbing each other for comfort' GOT ME TUHGETHA! 😭😭😭🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @pizzlerot2730
      @pizzlerot2730 Год назад +12

      Dude, legit, who was the first person to ever try one of these and think, "hmm this makes my taste buds want to scream and cry and run away and it's also giving me mad shits but I bet if I let it get just about rotten then it'll be on point 👌" like bro wat 💀

    • @-Reagan
      @-Reagan Год назад +3

      @@pizzlerot2730 right?! Lol they were probably starving and it was the only thing they had left - you make me curious to find out bc there must be a story about this.

    • @pizzlerot2730
      @pizzlerot2730 Год назад +5

      @@-Reagan yeah I'm sure you're right, it's just funny to think about lol. The name of the process is actually called "bletting", it's basically kinda ripening until it's slightly rotted which is going on here, and it has to be done with some fruits like persimmons, medlars, quinces, and others to reduce the compounds that taste bad or lead to GI distress. I'm sure it probably originated from times when food wasn't plentiful and people needed to eat whatever was palatable to survive, and they found that these fruits that they'd previously thought weren't very edible could actually be eaten when they were super over-ripened. Or possibly when people had a harvest that stayed on trees too long and got hit by frost (which jump-starts the process) and they tried to salvage what they could. Very interesting to think about though, and also hilarious to imagine some guy shitting his brains out and then thinking to himself, "idk let me give this another shot but this time with more rot and stank on it" 🤣

    • @Uapa500
      @Uapa500 Год назад

      Yes, we put them in a pot with apples when we want them to ripe faster ☺️

  • @gabrielagomez8169
    @gabrielagomez8169 Год назад +543

    This what I NEEDED! Last night I had a persimmon for the second time ever and it was the Hachiya type but I didn’t even know there was a difference. The first time I had the Fuyu type and I really enjoyed it so I wanted to try it again! Well, when the fruit started sticking to the roof of my mouth and my tongue and sort of peeling I thought it might been an allergic reaction😰 So I quickly brushed my teeth, tongue, and roof of my mouth to get rid of the peeling and waited for whatever happened next yet nothing did😭😅 So thank you for the explanation!❤️

    • @catelynnes8377
      @catelynnes8377 Год назад +21

      I ate a banana that wasn't ripe yet and it gave that starchy feel and it wasn't sour but it wasn't sweet either idkh to explain it but it was soooooobaddddddd😖 the banana was a "bb" species lol idkw it's called but i put it in the fridge and it was getting brown so i thought it was ripe but it wasn't 🥲

    • @raniekateesteban2735
      @raniekateesteban2735 Год назад +28

      if u want to ripen ur banana dont put it in the fridge..

    • @pugas587
      @pugas587 Год назад +7

      ​​@@catelynnes8377 Brown paper bag

    • @TheBluestflamingos
      @TheBluestflamingos Год назад +22

      @@catelynnes8377 was it really big? Plantains look a lot like bananas, but they're super starchy and not sweet at all. It's much more like a potato than a fruit.
      If you have plantains, I recommend keeping them until they go super brown on the peel, then use a knife to separate the peel from the fruit, cut the fruit into 0.5 inch wide slices, and put them on a greased baking sheet. Sprinkle with salt. Throw them in the oven at high heat for like 10 minutes.
      Baking plantains is quick and easy, and it brings out their sweet undertones while softening the fruit. A little kick of salt ties it all together.
      My neighbor when I was little was a woman from Nigeria, and that's the way she always cooked them. They're so good.

    • @catelynnes8377
      @catelynnes8377 Год назад +5

      @@TheBluestflamingos Hi Julia no i don't think it's a plantain it's tiny😅 unless Publix is selling bb plantains 👀 i wrapped it in half a paper towel (i ran out of paper bags🥲) now it sleeps on my counter😴

  • @bommmmm415
    @bommmmm415 2 месяца назад +1

    Tried them both, the first one is great, crunchy sweet, and my favorite one, the second one was also great, it was pretty fun to eat and also sweet.

  • @merandaseeber684
    @merandaseeber684 7 месяцев назад +3

    ❤ I've had both. And I love the pudding persimmon, you are soooo right that type can't even be remotely firm. I've been trying to convince people just to try again when its ripe ❤ thank you

  • @p0cketplut0
    @p0cketplut0 Год назад +390

    Well I learned something new today! :D

  • @rickcoona
    @rickcoona Год назад +311

    they must be frozen first they are a winter fruit which is why they are harvested after the first frost they are lovely

    • @icuabc1235
      @icuabc1235 6 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@raquielyHere in U.S they don't ripen until late fall or early winter. They are smaller than these and full of seeds. Folk lore says bite the seed and split it. What ever eating utensil the insides of seed shows will dictate the upcoming winter.

    • @Lyddiebits
      @Lyddiebits 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@icuabc1235hmmm.
      What part of the US are you from?
      I've heard no such folklore.

    • @icuabc1235
      @icuabc1235 6 месяцев назад +3

      @@Lyddiebits yeah it's like a fork, mild winter
      Spoon, a lot of snow
      Knife, a bitter cold winter.
      I'm from and still am in Oklahoma.

    • @blackbway
      @blackbway 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@icuabc1235you are probably talking about the American percemon. It's a smaller fruit. The hathiya is from Asia and is bigger.

    • @icuabc1235
      @icuabc1235 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@blackbway I think I said in the U.S and also they were smaller.

  • @omens5010
    @omens5010 6 месяцев назад

    There was a sale on persimmons at M&S, 3 pack, all of them 30p. I bought like 10 packages. I love persimmons so much

  • @missunique5414
    @missunique5414 7 месяцев назад

    My grandparents use to make persimmon cookies. I haven’t had a persimmon since they passed away. 😢

  • @crumplescribble
    @crumplescribble Год назад +51

    when i was in sixth grade there was a bunch of persimmon trees right next to the fence that closed the playground off from the woods. we used to collect them and eat them. they tasted very chalky, like the soft one when firm. our teacher actually made persimmon cookies for us and they were the best cookies i’ve ever had to this day!

    • @ganjackbogle876
      @ganjackbogle876 Год назад +2

      That’s so sweet persimmon cookies r the best

    • @alicianorris9352
      @alicianorris9352 Год назад

      I've never heard of using them in cookies only jellies! Interesting 🤔😁

  • @SweetyGreen
    @SweetyGreen Год назад +274

    That makes so much sense I thought I just got a bad batch my mouth was instantly dry I was like omg am I having an allergic reaction ! 😅

    • @viktoriaschmied6627
      @viktoriaschmied6627 Год назад +10

      Shock them in cold over night, outside or fridge work both. It'll make the compound that gives that feeling break up.

    • @zisancelik4430
      @zisancelik4430 Год назад +1

      Same! This is eye opening

  • @Todeeee
    @Todeeee 2 месяца назад +1

    Wild persimmons grow where i live in missouri, if you eat them when under ripe they make your entire mouth feel like cotton.

  • @revengense7604
    @revengense7604 Год назад +686

    We have native persimmon here in Kentucky. They’ll give you “lock jaw” if they’re not ripe.

    • @mikebearpig7425
      @mikebearpig7425 Год назад +30

      Lock jaw as in tetanus? As in rust ?

    • @Baby_Bebbi_The_Fur
      @Baby_Bebbi_The_Fur Год назад +42

      We do? I’m in Kentucky and I thought they were tomatoes 💀

    • @revengense7604
      @revengense7604 Год назад

      @@mikebearpig7425 Nah not literal lock jaw, they’re just so bitter and sower it makes it hard to open your mouth for a few seconds.

    • @OpposingPony
      @OpposingPony Год назад +29

      Agreed, same here in Arkansas. I've never seen a persimmon that large though... ours are usually about the size of a key lime.

    • @JaseekaRawr
      @JaseekaRawr Год назад +6

      ​@@Baby_Bebbi_The_Fur right, I'm from KY & never knew this 😂

  • @DeathMetalDerf
    @DeathMetalDerf Год назад +109

    I've definitely made the persimmon mistake. I follow a RUclipsr called The Weird Explorer and he's all about fruits. He's the one who taught me that there are two different kinds of those, and one has to be almost too soft to be close to edible

    • @creepy-kitty
      @creepy-kitty Год назад +1

      Yes the round fruyu one has to be soft if not just don't even pick yet it'll be too bitter

    • @Alayne985
      @Alayne985 Год назад +4

      @@creepy-kitty you have it backwards. The round, fuyu persimmon you can eat completely hard. They are sweet and non- astringent. The hachiya with the pointy bottom have to be eaten soft.

    • @beansoup8171
      @beansoup8171 Год назад

      ​@@Alayne985 I mean I ate a hachiya completely hard a few days ago
      Not astringent and very sweet

  • @kerribell3837
    @kerribell3837 7 месяцев назад +2

    That is the type we had growing in our yard I use to climb it and sit in th tree and squish it in my hand and eat it like a crazy little wild animal, I was about 4 years old it was so fun and yummy until I ate to many 😂 and persimmon cookies are yummy 😋
    I didn't knw there was so many different varieties❤

  • @peaceofpiety
    @peaceofpiety 7 месяцев назад +1

    The first time I tried it my experience was like yours, felt so dry and chalky in the mouth. It's delicious when it's soft. I recently purchased the smaller persimmons, they were red inside and looked like a tomato, not brown. I put them into an argula salad instead of tomato and used fennel instead of onion. Cut up some ginger for zing, and added pumpkin seeds and flax seeds. Was awesome with raspberry vinegarette, like a desert salad.

  • @aidancostell4395
    @aidancostell4395 Год назад +183

    I had a persimmon tree on my property growing up and it was the soft kind. I didn’t realize that there were persimmons you could eat firm, so the first time I ever saw someone take a bite out of a firm persimmon I was absolutely horrified lol.

    • @deuscoromat742
      @deuscoromat742 Год назад +5

      That's a native variety to north America. The Fuyu is Asian and has been selectively bred.

    • @walmars3curity
      @walmars3curity Год назад +3

      Its like eating chalk

    • @Delmarvellous
      @Delmarvellous 9 месяцев назад +1

      It’s like eating chalk only if it’s not ripe enough. If they’re nice and orange but they’re still hard, put them in the freezer overnight. then they should be sweet enough to eat once they thaw.

  • @LadyPisces96
    @LadyPisces96 Год назад +569

    Persimmon is called "caqui" in 🇧🇷 and I just eat it directly, no spoons. So delicious.

    • @batatafrita2783
      @batatafrita2783 Год назад +11

      A graça do caqui é ter que lava a mão de comer

    • @laurapaivab
      @laurapaivab Год назад +4

      Caqui é muito bom 💜💜💜💜

    • @nattycampos88
      @nattycampos88 Год назад +9

      Caqui (molinho) e caqui café (durinho) ❤

    • @ninjapanda4024
      @ninjapanda4024 Год назад +15

      That’s cool in japan it’s kaki

    • @jana6666l
      @jana6666l Год назад +15

      In Germany we say "Kaki"

  • @terig8974
    @terig8974 7 месяцев назад

    The description of the Hachiya persimmon sound like it has tannins.
    I love persimmons with whipped cream.

  • @marty7vn
    @marty7vn 3 месяца назад

    I’m from Italy and I actually have a tree of the soft kind in my garden, used to suck on them when I was a kid, you brought back such happy memories 🥹

  • @chel9064
    @chel9064 Год назад +52

    I have persimmon trees around my house but they are smaller than those persimmons (and not that bright color) and are bitter until they get more ripe, I made pies with them for Thanksgiving this year. (I'm from Arkansas)

    • @Your_Local_Weirdo75
      @Your_Local_Weirdo75 Год назад +6

      Cool! My neighbor has a persimmon tree

    • @blahblah2866
      @blahblah2866 Год назад +1

      wow! it sounds like it might be a virginia persimmon, they're native but not sold in grocery stores

  • @aallaajaafar
    @aallaajaafar Год назад +35

    We always buy the hachiya persimmons because the sweetness of it when it's ripe is the best!!! You don't actually have to wait for it to be too soft and soggy like that, it's ripe enough when you can press it amd feel softness, or if you sun-dry them like how they do in korea your don't need to wait for them to ripen because once dried enough they turn sweet too

  • @GrumpyCat24
    @GrumpyCat24 7 месяцев назад +1

    A bunch of us kids grabbed some Persimmons off somebody's tree When We snuck through their yard walking home from elementary school - biggest mistake ever! LOL that was a 1982 I have not eaten a persimmon since😂

  • @msjuier
    @msjuier 3 месяца назад

    i LOVE these fruits they give me a nostalgic feeling tbh

  • @beardoodle9835
    @beardoodle9835 Год назад +11

    There's a persimmon farm down the road from me, and they sell baskets of them in season. They mainly sell baskets of the fuyu, because the hachiya is what they use to make traditional Japanese style sun-dried persimmons, which are sooooooo delicious. 😋

  • @averagefluteplayer
    @averagefluteplayer Год назад +26

    Dude I thought all persimmons were like firm hachiya because that was the type near my house. That’s why I was always confused when youtubers or anyone on the internet used firm persimmons because all I could think was “DO YOU GUYS NOT HAVE SANDPAPER TONGUES?” Like I knew you could wait until they were super super squishy but they’re too sweet for me by then, but I was baffled every time I saw people est or use firm persimmons in their cooking. Thanks, lol

  • @Crazy_pillow
    @Crazy_pillow 3 месяца назад +1

    Sometimes it's so bad you have to go to the hospital because your throat completely dries up

  • @BYakimets
    @BYakimets 2 месяца назад

    I've never tried persimmon! I'm not always sure about trying new fruit, but when i have an idea what to do that makes it easier, so maybe I'll try them now!

  • @DeannaAKADeanna
    @DeannaAKADeanna Год назад +71

    I used to live in a house where there were multiple trees or both types.The Fuyu is really good for a snack or chopping up in a salad. The mushy-ripe Hachiya makes a great sweet loaf (like banana bread) or a steamed pudding (which is how my mother grew up eating it which was a little similar to the persimmon bread). Most recipes have some warming spices similar to pumpkin pie. So good!

    • @2malsahm59
      @2malsahm59 7 месяцев назад +2

      Yes ive made a quickbread

    • @lilbitscandalus
      @lilbitscandalus 6 месяцев назад +1

      Which one is good to make dried persimmon

  • @70RY
    @70RY Год назад +102

    I need to send this to my mom. When I was a kid, she got tired of me complaining that it made my mouth feel funny and me "wasting" them so she stopped giving me any. Turns out I was right. Listen to your kids.

    • @jemadamson2715
      @jemadamson2715 Год назад +4

      Did she not eat them herself?

    • @bostonlatina
      @bostonlatina Год назад

      Sounds like an allergy

    • @yeemawheaver1387
      @yeemawheaver1387 Год назад +1

      ​@@jemadamson2715 yeah, did the mom not know how tasted or should have been eaten? Seems weird that she would give her child something she refused to try.

  • @justrika3392
    @justrika3392 7 месяцев назад +1

    We have it in Georgia, too! We had the hard type in our yard lol, We call it "Karalioki" in here.

  • @sucodemiojo3860
    @sucodemiojo3860 3 месяца назад

    My grandma used to buy persimmons for me as a child, since it was one of my favorite fruits. Here in Brazil tho, we call them "Caquis". They're sooo good.

  • @tasneemzarrouk8079
    @tasneemzarrouk8079 Год назад +5

    Actually in Egypt we only have the Hachiya type and we always eat it soft ofc. , but the other day I watched a Korean RUclipsr saying she likes persimmon firm and it literally shook me 😂

  • @ItsYaBoiV
    @ItsYaBoiV Год назад +29

    RUclips really out here recommending me all the persimmon videos when I'm super allergic to them 😆

    • @nikkij4873
      @nikkij4873 Год назад +3

      I had a persimmon the other day for the first time. Made my mouth mildly itchy, then I violently threw it all up.
      So I’m assuming I’m allergic to persimmon as well?
      Lol can I ask how you found out?

    • @ItsYaBoiV
      @ItsYaBoiV Год назад +2

      @Nikki J When I eat them my throat swells closed and my mouth puffs up like one of the Kardashians lip fillers. I found out when I Ate one and almost died. But a lot of plants trigger anaphylactic shock in me, I'm even allergic to most kinds of grass.

    • @nikkij4873
      @nikkij4873 Год назад +1

      @@ItsYaBoiV yikes!! I’m allergic to grass too but it just makes my skin itchy. I do have pretty severe asthma though but no anaphylaxis. My friend has anaphylactic allergies to dairy, and any kind of meat from a four legged animal. That sh*t is rough.
      Thank you for answering and best of luck to you!! :D

    • @jhandle900
      @jhandle900 Год назад

      It's because they're in season rn so everyone is jumping on the video train.

  • @larazanellato9483
    @larazanellato9483 5 месяцев назад

    in italy we call them “caco mela” and usually we eat the squishy one, in rural parts of towns especially in the north italy there are a lot of houses with trees full of them in autumn and they are soooo good😍

  • @hosookim2622
    @hosookim2622 6 месяцев назад

    My grandparents in Korea used to freeze the soft ones, so that when you take it out of the freezer, you can have it like sorbet. AND ITS SOOOO GOOD

  • @TempestWind87
    @TempestWind87 Год назад +71

    Yep! I actually didn't super mind the furry feeling in my mouth from the hachiya, though I won't go so far as to call it pleasant

    • @liliumjade
      @liliumjade Год назад

      Be careful, when they're not fully ripe they have a certain chemical that causes the astringent taste/feel. Eating too much of it while unripe can cause the stomach content to clump up and cause blockage in your intestine. In the past people have died from this because of the lack of treatment options.

    • @_Chessa_
      @_Chessa_ Год назад +3

      It’s like when you think a plantain is a banana and peel it and take a bite. Super chalky and very dry in the mouth almost felt like I bit into straight chalk cotton. I can only imagine what an unripe Hachiya is like.

    • @TempestWind87
      @TempestWind87 Год назад +1

      @@liliumjade good to know! I'll make sure not to do that again.

    • @Juneessary
      @Juneessary Год назад +1

      I didn't realize persimmons were so uncommon, people can't realize that it's unripe, or have someone tell them. .

    • @GayLuigi333
      @GayLuigi333 Год назад +3

      @@Juneessary they’re really uncommon where I live, I don’t think I’ve ever seen one in real life, only have heard the word

  • @hellohana68
    @hellohana68 Год назад +21

    Omg that's why my mouth felt so weird!!! Thank you lmao

  • @Tokipurra
    @Tokipurra 3 месяца назад +1

    I have a persimmon tree and we have both kinds! They are delicious and I’ve bitten an unripe hachiya persimmon, it made my mouth feel like it had millions or thousands of microscopic seeds. It went away in like an hour! I love both kinds of persimmon.

  • @fairytells5225
    @fairytells5225 6 месяцев назад

    Hachiya persimmons are quite popular where I live, especially rn, in late autumn/early winter. If you leave it outside or in a freezer, it becomes super soft and sweet very fast. Or you can put it with some apples, it will ripen faster. It's not my favourite fruit (too messy), but it's really nice to have sometimes.

  • @wsiak340
    @wsiak340 Год назад +6

    In East Asian countries they're about as common as strawberries or peaches or any other seasonal fruits.
    Now I live abroad and almost no one even knows what persimmons are, which is really weird because they sell them everywhere in almost all the local supermarkets.

    • @icvpoetry973
      @icvpoetry973 Год назад

      Yeah same in the Balkans of Europe, i thought persimmons were as common as apples lol

    • @Ion_el
      @Ion_el Год назад

      I thought they were called Kaki (I'm from Eastern Europe)

    • @mahanaimshines4540
      @mahanaimshines4540 Год назад

      @@Ion_el Kaki means Persimmon in Japanese, but those two are a variety.

    • @Ion_el
      @Ion_el Год назад +1

      @@mahanaimshines4540 oh ok

  • @melbkeo
    @melbkeo Год назад +30

    I just finished eating a persimmon…the fuyu type. My RUclips is watching me 👀

  • @emmaforsberg58
    @emmaforsberg58 6 месяцев назад

    My grandma always gave the the squishy ones for a snack!

  • @joroh97
    @joroh97 4 месяца назад

    There is also a type of persimmons that grow native in North America! They are much smaller and have a dusty pink coloring. Like the Hachiya persimmon, they have to be super soft before eating. Delicious when ripe- astringent when firm

  • @Sashagrim
    @Sashagrim 10 месяцев назад +17

    I would freeze hachiya persimmon and scoop it like ice cream, it was sooo good!

  • @historybound9615
    @historybound9615 Год назад +23

    There is a smaller variety of soft persimmon that grows wild in the Southeastern United States, the astringent properties when unripe are very well known.
    When someone is in a bitter mood or has a poor expression on their face, it's often compared to having eaten a green persimmon.

  • @california3186
    @california3186 7 месяцев назад

    You use the Hatchia in baking only. Learned that the hard way. 😂😂😂

  • @OctaneStimAddict
    @OctaneStimAddict 3 месяца назад

    My grandma used to always get us the Hachiya ones when I was growing up so I’m used to eating them super soft 😂

  • @laranovak5920
    @laranovak5920 Год назад +18

    We call this fruit "kaki" in our country. The firm one is called "vanilla kaki". It is pretty common fruit in autumn.

    • @MsCaro1996
      @MsCaro1996 Год назад +2

      In Italy we call it kaki too, but I only knew the tipe that you should eat when is soft

    • @KillerCrewmate2526
      @KillerCrewmate2526 Год назад +1

      In French we call it kaki as well and it’s the tastiest fruit, It don’t contain any sure flavour like other fruit has, WHEN VERY SOFT of course, otherwise it will be kinda similar to lemon with a very very weird texture.

    • @nutsamaspi1466
      @nutsamaspi1466 Год назад

      We call it xurma in georgian

    • @cunfuzzledpeep6983
      @cunfuzzledpeep6983 Год назад +1

      we call it that in Brazil

    • @amqliaw
      @amqliaw Год назад

      Brasileiro??

  • @1plus68hehe
    @1plus68hehe Год назад +16

    My grandfather has the second type of persimmon tree in his backyard. I remember going to his house and eating persimmons in the fall

  • @HunnieSoFly06
    @HunnieSoFly06 7 месяцев назад

    My grandma had a persimmon cookie recipe using hachiya persimmon. They are so good!!

  • @restfulstillness2274
    @restfulstillness2274 7 месяцев назад

    I had the same exact experience. It took me a couple of years to give persimmons, in general, another chance.

  • @Unknownn.Userr.1
    @Unknownn.Userr.1 8 месяцев назад +20

    Theres also a crunchy kind also and its my fav type of the fruit!😋

  • @xenontesla122
    @xenontesla122 Год назад +6

    I started having persimmons a couple years ago. Since they’re seasonal, it feels like a fall/winter treat!

  • @Ship_the_ish
    @Ship_the_ish 7 месяцев назад

    My grandparents grew the ones that you need to eat soft, so I thought that you needed to wait for all persimmons to be soft before eating

  • @justjaguar2314
    @justjaguar2314 5 месяцев назад +2

    There are soooo many persimmon varieties, these are just the 2 "main categories".
    They mainly sell the "fuyu" type in grocery stores so don't worry

    • @alecity4877
      @alecity4877 2 месяца назад

      they sell neither on the stores where I live lol.

    • @justjaguar2314
      @justjaguar2314 2 месяца назад

      @@alecity4877 regional difference, they don't really sell persimmons where I live either, they're rare in stores

  • @EVERGLOW828
    @EVERGLOW828 Год назад +12

    I have a wild persimmon tree here in NC, it’s the same way you have to wait til it is very golden almost like falling apart in your hands it’s so sweet and tasty. The opossums love it 🥰 ❤

  • @Arttastic12
    @Arttastic12 Год назад +26

    I’ve had both and I looove them but some of them do not make your mouth dry.

  • @suzannetisdall7609
    @suzannetisdall7609 7 месяцев назад

    In Kentucky, there’s persimmon trees that grow wild and you bite into a green persimmon, it will guarantee you a permanent pucker fir the entire day

  • @Lmm321
    @Lmm321 7 месяцев назад +1

    I've eaten both. I love them. The trick to eating the hachiya is to cut it up small and drink lots of water. The tannins make it very dry. It's similar to dry grapes.

  • @victoriapennington4604
    @victoriapennington4604 Год назад +16

    My grandmother always made persimmon bread, that shits bomb

  • @nguyenao6868
    @nguyenao6868 Год назад +43

    I grew up eating the Hachiya type and it used to be my childhood favorite. If you were raised in Vietnam, you can definitely relate

  • @Amber_RBL
    @Amber_RBL 7 месяцев назад

    The second one is my childhood snack I would eat after I come home front school

  • @fleshcrafterangel
    @fleshcrafterangel 7 месяцев назад

    I actually grew up on Hachiya persimmons because they were what the local persimmon orchard grew, and then got deeply confused for a while when I went to get persimmons from elsewhere and they were Fuyu persimmons instead.

  • @FernandaSilva-pj2lx
    @FernandaSilva-pj2lx Год назад +97

    Yes we have them both in Brazil and they are delicious! But you should wait until it is really ripe to eat the second one

    • @Rabbit-ho6tb
      @Rabbit-ho6tb 5 месяцев назад +1

      Caquiiii❤❤

    • @alexis6399
      @alexis6399 5 месяцев назад

      como voce chama o hachiya e fuyu?? aqui em portugal a gente chama os fuyu "de roer" 💀

    • @pswinck
      @pswinck 5 месяцев назад

      ⁠​⁠@@alexis6399No Brasil o hachiya a gente chama de caqui rama forte e o Fuyo de caqui chocolate ou caqui fuyo mesmo

  • @vickibayer1275
    @vickibayer1275 Год назад +40

    Growing up, I only ever had the Hachiya, super soft ones. We didn’t have them very often, it was kind of a special treat for my mom and I to find them in our tiny west Texas grocery store.
    I never knew about the firm ones until years later I bought one, took it home and kept waiting for it to ripen up. It never did and went moldy. Lol. I had no idea that the firm ones stayed firmer or were that brown color inside.
    Good to know.

  • @tracyburzynski1669
    @tracyburzynski1669 2 месяца назад

    I love this in the 1930s my grandma was a kid in Chicago IL
    No one understood what to do with the persimmons.they threw out all of them every shipment..
    They knew because her and her siblings would go get the crate😊

  • @ArtTime12345
    @ArtTime12345 5 месяцев назад

    I actually have never had the brown persimmon! I loooooove the soft persimmon, it's sooooo good ❤❤❤❤

  • @colourfulsouls
    @colourfulsouls Год назад +26

    I’ve never tried them, I would def like to tho, and it’s great to know the difference in kinds!

    • @liliflafi5644
      @liliflafi5644 Год назад

      when buying them see the mole on top of the fruit if is square is the Brown fleshed type

  • @tuckermoses-hanson2435
    @tuckermoses-hanson2435 Год назад +6

    Neighbors once had astringent varieties and we could eat as many as we wanted. When the persimmons stay on the tree until December, it’s like you find the ice cream tree from your dreams 🤤

  • @nyloxyloto4871
    @nyloxyloto4871 6 месяцев назад

    In Turkey, I've only seen the Hachiya type everywhere and since it was my first time trying Persimmons I genuinely thought why these fruits were always so soft and messy, and so sweet of course. So I made milkshakes out of them

  • @mariaeduardasousa7603
    @mariaeduardasousa7603 4 месяца назад

    the second one is the most common in my home town, and it’s one of my favourite fruits in life
    i think i only tried the first when i was like 17 yo, and i love it so much bc it’s easier to eat, you can take it on the go and eat it like an apple (the texture is similar too)
    love it 🤌🏻

  • @moonfirestudios5741
    @moonfirestudios5741 Год назад +17

    My grandparents have a hachiya persimmon tree in their backyard so that was the type of persimmon I grew up eating. 😊

  • @promisemadepromisekept.7575
    @promisemadepromisekept.7575 Год назад +20

    I'm JAMAICAN 🇯🇲 and I was in Ukraine for a few months, arriving in January, it was my first time seeing those fruits and was in total awe at it's look and taste...THEY ARE WINTER FRUITS and you will not find them in any other seasons.... bought them from KLASS supermarket on 23rd in KHARKOV.

  • @MsStresa
    @MsStresa 5 месяцев назад

    Years ago I used to have a tree of the soft kind at my parents house ❤ I remember being upset not having the hard kind and not eating with pleasure. I really miss it nowday, also the hard kind is become way more popular and the soft kind it's hard to find at the market 🥺💔

  • @desire8830
    @desire8830 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you for sharing , I recently received both, never had the longer bigger one before and was a little scarred to eat it, but I love
    Persimmons! So they are sitting! Now I can’t wait to try it!

  • @SojSraco
    @SojSraco Год назад +14

    My grandma has a whole persimmon tree in her back yard and I make sure I make every season

  • @Alifahusna_97
    @Alifahusna_97 Год назад +106

    Persimmon tastes heavenly! I craved it last year when I was having a fever and my mum bought it for me even tho it’s expensive because it’s imported from South Korea.
    I had always been wanting to try it because of Kdrama LMAO

    • @lunaballuna
      @lunaballuna Год назад +5

      They actually grow quite easily here in South Carolina :) there's a HUGE persimmon tree growing on the side of the road across from my neighborhood lol I pick them every year. If I'm not mistaken, persimmons are fairly common her in SC, so we see farmers markets and road side fruit stands selling them all the time in huge bags or buckets 😀

    • @Alifahusna_97
      @Alifahusna_97 Год назад +2

      @@lunaballuna Oh, nice to know that! I’m quite jealous of you. Here in Malaysia, persimmon is not a local fruit and it’s quite rare to find it sold unless it’s in markets that sell imported goods. :(

    • @HC-ii9wj
      @HC-ii9wj Год назад +1

      Koreans often keep the soft persimmons (Gam, or Gaam) in the freezer and eat like sherbet (ice cream) as a dessert. The hard bitter persimmons, called Dan-gam, are dried till they become Got-gam, naturally sweeten during the drying process. Dried Persimmons are a good source of vitamin A to maintain healthy organ functioning and fiber to regulate the digestive tract. The fruits also provide small amounts of vitamin C to strengthen the immune system, potassium to balance fluid levels within the body, and calcium to protect bones and teeth.

  • @linneamedia
    @linneamedia 7 месяцев назад

    I used to eat the second type of persimmon in Italy through the season, and it is one of the most delicious and amazing fruits. I never see them here.

  • @xxdolphin_lover69xx64
    @xxdolphin_lover69xx64 7 месяцев назад

    My mom would put the second type on vanilla goat ice cream or rice pudding growing up, and it was the most amazing thing

  • @6catsinanalley
    @6catsinanalley Год назад +11

    Hachiya persimmons are mainly eaten dried while Fuyu are typically what people would eat normally. There is another way to eat Hachiya persimmons but I forgot exactly how, I know you put them in a freezer for a bit but forgot what you do next lol. My mom ate them all the time when she used to live in Japan so she told me a few ways to eat them

    • @pennywang6461
      @pennywang6461 Год назад +1

      You put it in an air tight bag when they’re still green and leave them for a week?