Pepquino micro melons are 20 times smaller than regular watermelons; they were discovered in South America
Pepquino micro melons are 20 times smaller than regular watermelons; they were discovered in South Americau00a0
Small but perfectly formed Pepquino micro melons have been launched, 20 times smaller than their full size counterparts.
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Bizarre: A delighted girl compares the two watermelons. While Pepquino micro melons resemble their larger cousins, it has a fresh crisp taste similar to a cucumber and juicy light green flesh |
The rare Pepquino melon measures just an over inch from tip-to-tip, but has the identical external pattern and distinctive shape of traditional watermelons.
Allsweet watermelons have an elongated shape and range from 17" to 19" in length and 7" in diameter. The average weight is 11-15 kg.
Like cucumber
It was discovered by Dutch food producers in South America who brought it to the Netherlands and cultivated it in greenhouses.
While it resembles its larger cousins, it has a fresh crisp taste similar to a cucumber and juicy light green flesh.
It can be eaten as a snack or appetiser, like olives, in a summer salad, stir fried or made into a sorbet and teamed with dark chocolate.
With its distinctive appearance and slightly sour taste producer Koppert Cress believes it is set to become a new food fad in top London restaurants.
Prices start at u00a310 (Rs 700) per 250g box, which contains around 50 melons.
Anneke Cuppen, marketing manager at Koppert Cress, said they had orders for the melons in the UK. She said: "Demand for the melons has so far come from the restaurant and hotel trade. We're hoping to sell 50-100 boxes a week.
The Pepquino melon, less than a centimetre in diameter, most closely resembles the Allsweet variety of watermelon.