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| Asian Cooking (alt.food.asian) A newsgroup for the discussion of recipes, ingredients, equipment and techniques used specifically in the preparation of Asian foods. |
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Hi,
I just read in FOCUS that there seems to be some kind of berry called "Miracle Berry". It's taste is non-existent, but after having consumed them, everything that usually tastes sour suddenly tastes sweet. In Japan it's used as a non-sugar sweetener. Does anyone know where I can get some of those berries in Germany? Thanks. René |
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Frank wrote on Sat, 20 May 2006 16:40:53 +0200:
I don't have any strong views about the berries and don't want to try them but a Google search will almost certainly produce a source. For example try: "miracle berries" buy OR Purchase James Silverton. |
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aren´t they from canada?
frank They're originally from West Africa. Here is a page on miracle fruit: http://www.capetrib.com.au/miracle.htm It says that for the "miracle" effect to work, the fruit should be consumed soon after picking. Refrigeration reduces or eliminates the effect. -- - Jeff Lichtman Author, Baseball for Rookies http://baseball-for-rookies.com/ |
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Rene Ruppert wrote:
Hi, I just read in FOCUS that there seems to be some kind of berry called "Miracle Berry". It's taste is non-existent, but after having consumed them, everything that usually tastes sour suddenly tastes sweet. In Japan it's used as a non-sugar sweetener. Does anyone know where I can get some of those berries in Germany? Thanks. René Apparently though, you have to eat them immediately on picking to have the right effect, it diminishes quickly if you store. Its not commercially grown, but people are beginning to grow it as a house plant, but the frost will kill it. |
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