DNYUZ
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Television
    • Theater
    • Gaming
    • Sports
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
Home News

New Zealand’s unofficial fruit is the feijoa, not the kiwi. And part of the fun is in giving it away

May 14, 2025
in News
New Zealand’s unofficial fruit is the feijoa, not the kiwi. And part of the fun is in giving it away
495
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — The unofficial national fruit of isn’t native to the country – it’s South American. It isn’t exclusively found in New Zealand. And it’s not, perhaps surprisingly, the kiwi. It’s the feijoa.

Known as pineapple guava elsewhere, the fruit — a green perfumed oval with a polarizing taste — can be purchased in California or Canberra. Yet no country has embraced the feijoa with quite the fervor or the fixation of New Zealanders.

Due to its short shelf life, New Zealand — a nation of thriving fruit exports — has never been able to spin the feijoa (pronounced fee-jo-ah) into a global brand, as growers have done with apples and kiwi. But during the brief span of weeks each year when the fruit is ripe, the country goes feijoa wild.

A backyard boom

The feijoa’s allure comes partly from how it’s acquired. In autumn, fallen fruit forms fragrant carpets beneath backyard trees and is swept into boxes, bags and buckets to be offered for free outside homes, in office breakrooms and on neighborhood Facebook groups. There’s such abundance that some feijoa lovers take pride in never having paid for one.

“It’s sort of non-commercialized. We turn up our noses at the idea of buying them in the shop,” said Kate Evans, author of the book Feijoa: A Story of Obsession and Belonging. “You just sort of expect to get them for free.”

In suburban Wellington, Diana Ward-Pickering said she had given away “thousands” of feijoas from her five backyard trees this season: in a box on the sidewalk, to neighbors, to coworkers, to her daughter’s eyelash technician — in short, to any friend or stranger who wanted some.

On a recent Sunday, Ward-Pickering selected a feijoa from dozens on the ground, halved it with a spoon, and scooped the pale, creamy flesh into her mouth.

“Delicious,” she said. But while she could eat a kilogram (2.2 pounds) of the fruit in a sitting, she said, even her appetite couldn’t keep up with the sudden and generous bounty that arrives each April.

“There are people who can’t afford to pay for them,” Ward-Pickering said. “We happily give them away.”

Love it or hate it

Not everyone’s an enthusiast, and every New Zealander has an opinion. What devotees of the fruit savor as a distinctive texture, flavor and smell, is gritty, soapy or sour to others.

Diana Ward-Pickering’s daughter, Lizzy, gingerly slurped a piece of feijoa into her mouth and grimaced.

“It’s giving snot,” she said. “My mind has not changed.”

But for New Zealanders abroad who love the fruit, feijoas are a nostalgic taste evocative of a kiwi childhood. Evans, who admitted to once paying 3 Australian dollars ($1.90) for a single feijoa at a market in Australia, said that in 12 years living overseas she often saw expatriates asking the same question online: Where can I find feijoas?

A strange history

How a fruit that hails from the highlands, and a corner of first came to New Zealand remains something of a mystery, Evans said. But what’s known is that feijoas have been in New Zealand for just over 100 years, probably originating from California, via Australia.

The trees grow “extremely well” in New Zealand, growers say, due to the soil, subtropical climate and relative lack of destructive insect species.

In spite of New Zealand’s booming backyard feijoa economy there’s still demand for them in stores, where they are currently sold for about 9 to 10 New Zealand dollars ($5-6) per kilogram. There are about 100 commercial feijoa growers in New Zealand almost solely supplying the domestic market, including for popular beverages such as feijoa cider, kombucha and juice.

But exporting the fruit is “tricky,” said Brent Fuller, spokesperson for the New Zealand Feijoa Growers Association. “They’ll keep in the chiller for two or three weeks, but that’s about it.”

Research is underway to increase the shelf life of the fruit. But with the name feijoa still unknown abroad, it remains for now an institution of New Zealand’s autumn.

“It’s something that kind of bonds us and gives us an excuse to talk to people around us,” Evans said. The kiwi, she added, has been a lucrative export for New Zealand.

“But we don’t love it the way that we love feijoas.”

The post New Zealand’s unofficial fruit is the feijoa, not the kiwi. And part of the fun is in giving it away appeared first on Associated Press.

Share198Tweet124Share
Social Media Companies Now Work for Governments—Not Users
News

Social Media Companies Now Work for Governments—Not Users

by Foreign Policy
May 14, 2025

As tensions between India and Pakistan rose and then fell dramatically in recent days, the Indian government used the nation’s ...

Read more
News

‘My Fault: London’ Directors Dani Girdwood & Charlotte Fassler Returning For ‘Your Fault: London’

May 14, 2025
News

A founder who bet on 350 startups says passing on a hot AI company taught him a hard lesson

May 14, 2025
News

Colombia signs up to China’s Belt and Road Initiative

May 14, 2025
News

Trump’s meeting with Syria’s former-insurgent-turned-leader to give the country ‘chance at peace’

May 14, 2025
House lawmakers debate Medicaid reform, SALT deductions caps in contentious, marathon markup sessions for Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’

House lawmakers debate Medicaid reform, SALT deductions caps in contentious, marathon markup sessions for Trump’s ‘big beautiful bill’

May 14, 2025
Did Pakistan shoot down five Indian fighter jets? What we know

Did Pakistan shoot down five Indian fighter jets? What we know

May 14, 2025
‘Sakamoto Days’ Part 2 Trailer Teases Three-Way Assassin War

‘Sakamoto Days’ Part 2 Trailer Teases Three-Way Assassin War

May 14, 2025

Copyright © 2025.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • U.S.
    • World
    • Politics
    • Opinion
    • Business
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Environment
    • Science
  • Entertainment
    • Culture
    • Gaming
    • Music
    • Movie
    • Sports
    • Television
    • Theater
  • Tech
    • Apps
    • Autos
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel

Copyright © 2025.