Trifoliate orange is approved by the CIA as a security hedge. Four inch thorns make it near impossible to climb without looking like you fought a tiger, and when fully grown, like the ones outside their facilities in virginia, will stop a truck at full speed. That's a mean fucking tree.
@@let_uslunch8884 if they did a CIA gardening manual I would totally buy it... Jokes aside I beleive they had a specialist put together a report for the best security plantings for their facilities. Fences and wire aren't that hard to bypass and look kind of ugly, but a nice hedge with pretty yellow/orange fruit looks nicer. Possibly cheaper to buy as well. And probably harder to bypass. I believe they use a variety called "flying dragon" that has curved thorns and dense contorted branches that make it even more dense and vicious.
@@murunbuchstanzangur great to know, I will file the information away, you never can tell what's going to happen in these times. Or maybe we should be writing in code pay attention to every second and third letter... Ottawa inherent tamp innovative Ike listen.
Didn't mention the main thing that people use trifoliate orange for, which is... as a rootstock for other citrus trees. It makes a superb rootstock which tolerates cold, heavy soils, and is disease resistant (downsides: slower growing and dislikes heat and dry soil). The fact that the fruit is full of seeds is good in this regard, because it's the seeds that people want from those fruits - to plant to grow into rootstocks for more desirable fruits! :)
Found this out the hard way when the rootstock took over my baby lime tree. I sliced what I thought was a lime (ended up being an unripe one of these lovely fruit) and it was absolutely disgusting. Smelled really gross too. No wonder the tree was so green and lush. 😂
My neighbor gave me a single fruit, telling me it was rare. I planted it immediately, just stuck it in the ground. It looks like a succulent, minimal small leaves, the stems growing in curlicues, covered with thorns. Last year, 2019, when it was about 7 feet tall, & 16 years old, it suddenly burst into the most fragrant tiny white flowers. Eleven flowers, and I got 11 fruits, covered in down. I put them aside for seeds, didn't try them. This year, the plant was covered in flowers, but it was cold & rainy, with no bees. But today I saw I'm going to have tons of fruit. This plant survived being indifferently transplanted, has never been fertilzed, & survived the mega-snows of 2009, completely covered for months. I love this little plant & will take him wherever I go. I didn't even know what it was until last year. I've read that the University of Alabama (?) has a Flying Dragon (it's common name) hedge that is 150 years old, that has kept generations of frat boys hedged in. I live in Zone 7- I don't know the limits of it's cold hardiness. It looks otherworldly with a nice 7 foot high Scotch Broom- also easy to do- though that's not as cold hardy. I love this plant. It's a member of the family. ☺💖🌱🍊
thats a flying dragon a subspecies of that thing, it literally survives everything and is a mean kind of plant, the thorns are nasty as hell, maintenance of it... ouch!
As for using poncirus in selection. I read scientific text about creation citrus varieties (I'm russian and i read russian acticle of Subtropical Research Center, Sochi) and there was information that poncirus gives cold stable plants but they don’t have good tastе qualities. However, I think that poncirus are good and perspective. I bought this tree few weeks ago and now it grows at my home. (i'm a gardener student and i like growing some interesting plants) Thank for your video! Btw, in russian we call poncirus not orange, but lemon ("wild lemon", "lemon trifoliata")
I live in East TX,and in the rural areas,you encounter the trifoliate orange.We call them wild lemons.Very sour, and you can make a lemonade like drink out of it,tasty.
I glad to see someone has finally come up with a recipe for trifoliate orange-ade. This is the first video I've seen for using trifoliate oranges to make a beverage. I've seen recipies for sour Calamondin orange-ade and sumac-ade, but never trifoliate orange-ade. I'm considering growing this plant where I live in Ohio.
Common rootstock in north Florida due to cold tolerance. Often the grafted-on citrus dies of cold leaving a slightly damaged trifoliate orange tree that has no trouble with the climate.
@@toamaori Yes, in north florida zone 8 can get to 15 degrees and zone 9a can get to 20 degrees at night... it's rare, but happens every so many years. It's common to have very many mild winters and then a really bad winter that kills lots of subtropical or tropical plants, they usually just die to the roots, not completely, but have to regrow again.
Yup...I bought a Limequat online that didn't like something and died. From the rootstock emerged these weird-looking leaves,and a bit of Googling brought me here...
The way your head just pops into the video at 6:38 made me laugh so much. There's something about the way you just dangle it in there to say that line that is completely hilarious!
i think it's not toxic in the usual sense, but as with a lot of essential oils the terpene profile can trigger reactions. not a lot of people know that essential oils are notorious for causing dermatitis (like, more cases than maybe anything else), and yet people are always putting them on their skin. and it's a sensitivity that can develop with use. iirc i think the issue with trifoliata is that the juice has unusual levels of terpenes, but the skin is about the same as any other citrus skin
@@trapdoorguppi terpenes are like flavour compounds there are many of them and they can vary wildy They are commonly hunted down in, and bred into cannabis And like I said can vary from sweet citrus To astringent pine Or earthy musk Even cheesey
I love those things. We have them in North Georgia. We call them wild lemons, but I'm sure they are the same thing. Very sticky and sour. I never eat them raw, they make great juice, and I squeeze them onto lots of stuff on the grill. Very cool review
I planted two of these a while back (the Flying Dragon variety), just starting to get some decent yields, this year looks to be good. Wonderful smell, and it's a neat looking bush. If you slice several into thin wedges and stuff them into a bottle of vodka and let it infuse a few days it makes a GREAT flowery floral citrus vodka that goes wonderful with Sprite or ginger ale. Very sorry for your gf, probably gave over a dozen folks some vodka and it universally went over well. Definitely going to try and make some kind of preserves this year.
I love how these smell, reminds me a little of gardenia. Definitely resinous. Had one a few years back that I let my roommate smell and he thought it was disgusting. Adorable furbaby
For those wondering, Poncirus trifoliata can withstand drops into the upper negatives (F), and so is pretty much hardy in a continental zone 6b, and can be pushed to as low as zone 5b with varying levels of winter protection.
People are often surprised that the same chemical can cause different effects in different people. It’s more obvious with stuff like marijuana or alcohol, but even “poisons” effect people differently
I've got this as a rootstock on one of my citrus trees, and it started suckering. Beautifully lethal looking. I removed it, tried to get it to root, failed miserably. I think it was a punishment for my fantasies of it growing big enough to use as a neighbour deterrent.
Trifoliate orange is one of the harder citrus to get growing from a cutting. It's best to take cuttings from wood that's year or so old. I've had moderate success by using rooting hormone and sticking them into a container of sterilized perlite with a bag over top. It can still take several months for them to put out roots. If you can get them it's better to use seeds, there are plenty of them (as shown in the video) and they root deeper. Also thanks to a quirk in citrus biology Trifoliate Orange (and quite a few other citrus breeds) usually produce clones of the parent tree when grown from seed, which is another reason they're commonly used as rootstock.
Should have let it fruit and used seed or find the fruit and grow it from seed it’s a much healthier root mass from seed with a true tap root you won’t get from cuttings
@@brianmccarrier1605 That's the procedure I followed, but from what you say, perhaps I gave up on the cutting too soon. Oops... I've been looking for plants, or seeds, for awhile now but no joy here in uber-restrictive NZ. Thank you for all the information!
@@dutempsjadis1066 If it suckers again, use air-layering to get it to form roots before you cut it off. Also, many rootstocks are Citrus hybrids so it could also be Trifoliate x some other Citrus species rather than pure Trifoliate.
I know these, they smell wonderful.I once made a syrup with them & some honey& walnuts. Very delicious. No ill effects in my case.(but yeah will keep in mind that some people may react badly to it)
Found one of these growing in Philadelphia a few years ago. I love the smell, although some people are very averse to the smell... I candied the find, but unfortunately some of the pith came with it so most pieces were extremely bitter. I used them as a cocktail ingredient and a dare for risk-taking friends. Will have to try making juice out of em!
Makes a good rootstock, and from Zone 6 south, a very effective living fence. Great Swallowtail caterpillars will eat it, like Citrus, though the normal northern hosts are toothache tree (Zanthoxylum) and wafer ash (Ptelea).
I’m making a vid on salting and fermenting the rind in its own juice- great condiment for stews. Also added vanilla and cardamom to one batch which tastes amazing and works as a topper on savory grain bowls
There was a trifoliate orange bush in my old neighborhood in Philly and I frequently grabbed them as I walked by and ate them. They aren't very good as citrus goes but it never caused me a problem.
This was great! I stumbled upon this growing wild in Maryland and transplanted some shoots into my yard. You didn't mention the crazy thorns on the plant, but you may have only seen the fruit. Fruit smells wonderful and I like your description of lime + grapefruit + floral.
It is a True citrus (not a hibrid like 95% of the citrus fruit we eat), It is used for hedges and for rootstock for grafting other citrus because of the frost resistance. Dry peel is also used for tea. Cheers, your videos are great.
I live in Northern Virginia and I have one of these plants. Cold weather is not a problem. It is not invasive. It is in my front yard. The thorns on the plant are mighty. During the summer, I need to spray it about 3 times because tiny insects get under the leaves and they turn yellow and drop. In the spring, the bush gets covered with small white flowers. My bush is about 15 feet tall. The branches are very stiff and hard. Maybe the wood would be good for making knife handles? The fruit is extremely sour. Smelling the fruit leaves you with no doubt that this is a citrus plant. I obtained this plant from a company here in Virginia named "EdibleLandscaping.com". It was a cutting from a stem that they put a rooting hormone on and stuck it in a small pot. I went home and planted it. The big attraction for me was the gnarly shape of the stems and the huge thorns. If you plant this under your window, there is no burglar that would ever challenge it. It produces many many fruit and I have no pollinator for it. It pollinates itself. This link will take you to the website where I got mine. ediblelandscaping.com/products/tropicals/Citrus/TrifoliateOrange.php A basketball hoop is 10 feet tall. My plant is several feet higher than 10 feet.
Always so insightfull and objective! Need to mention, that because if its cold hardiness, it is the normal rootstock to graft all varieties of comercial citrus. Sometimes it even replaces the original planted citrus varieties because if its strengh. Greetings!
I have one of these trees in my yard and one year I made a syrup out of the juice of the fruit and then used that to make cookies. My mom loved the cookies but they were very rich and I didn't care for them very much but they were very citrusy.. and very good, if you only ate one or two. That being said, my mom ate several and loved them, so I gave her all of them. 😆 I don't particularly care for key lime pie or lemon pie and the cookies tasted very similar to those, so, if anyone is interested in that, try making syrup out of them.
I really love trifoliate orange; a grower near me has the flying dragon variety. The flavor is like no other citrus I've tried, but the resin they release is ridiculous to clean up. When I extract the fruit with vodka, all of my equipment takes a double application of CitraSolv degreaser/degummer to get most of it off. More resin recrystallizes after a week or so at the bottom of the bottle of the strained extract. Well worth it, though, for a really delicious extract I can use in cooking and cocktails.
I've been trying to figure out what this plant was for years. I've seen two plants in Oklahoma (very many years apart) and I'm strangely drawn to the weird smell of it. I'd like to infuse the outer peel into tea, like bergamot. It has a similar strangeness. Maybe a new kind of Earl Grey could come of it. I'd definitely like to try your bergamot tea infusion method with it. Maybe with green tea and call it "Earl Bright". See if it makes anyone sick before I market it.
These are actually invasive where I live. I go hiking through the forest where they grow in thick groves where you have to duck and weave making sure you wear glasses and a motorcycle jacket so you don’t get punctured. One day I fell off a 10 foot sand embankment onto a pile of the things. I can’t even describe what that was like but the oranges taste good
There's a trifoliate orange tree near where I live. I love the smell of the fruits but the taste of the juice is strong l. I've used it in margaritas before but definitely noticed it seemed to unsettle my stomach a bit. The tree is incredibly hardy, its survived incredibly cold ice weather in north central Texas.
It's the rootstock they graft to to achieve a dwarf citrus because it's slow growing as a rootstock I have a kaffir lime grafted onto one . Also cook a half into almost any curry ... yum Hi from western Australia
fun fact, the usda did a bunch of experiments trying to hybridize the trifoliate orange with other citrus fruits to make them cold hardy. and im fairly certain it worked because there are lemons that used to grow in a cow pasture near where i live (east Tennessee). ps. its actually a really interesting story about how they got there so hit me up if anyone wants to hear the whole thing.
We're working on building a permaculture forest of native foods in Arkansas to build up the land for wildlife. If you could get me some seeds, that would be rad.
@@manslaughterinc.9135 I might be able to! I'm unsure if they are still there, but if I can get up there in the next week ill let you know! P.S. the seeds are likely to contain more trifoliate orange genetics than the plant they came from because they are open-pollinated, hope that's alright!
How does it compare to a yuzu? Reason why I ask is I have a tree in the backyard that seems to be a cross between used to and trifoliate and can’t decide
I've been given a couple of these plants and I intend to grow them. My hope is that I can use them as a lemon replacement to add acidity to food, i.e. squeezing it over cooked green veggies or adding to a sauce etc. Would you say that it is reasonable to expect they can be used in this manner?
A measuring cup! It’s a lot more fun to watch you just pour ingredients together while you eyeball them. I love your show. So many fruits I hadn’t heard of.
Oh my gosh! My cat looks so similar to yours! Like same markings and everything. I rescued her, so I have no idea what breed she is and figured she wasn't anything normal.
You've seemed familiar to me for a while without me being able to put my finger on it. You remind me of Charlie Cox in "Daredevil." Love your channel! Cool combination of foodie stuff and botany stuff (even if the latter is unintentional). Gives me a good idea of what I should and shouldn't try to grow.
Wow! You have commercials on your vids now? Guess crossing 100k subscribers threshold must have bumped you up to a monetizing level💸. You deserve it! Thanks for entertaining me with your weird fruit adventures 😁
It is considered invasive, but maybe that is because no one uses it for anything, otherwise it might be considered as a wonderful cold hardy producer of a special fruit. I have only found fruit on them here one or two times in 20 year so some woods dweller(s) must find them fine as they are sans addition of sugar. They really produced a lot of blossoms this year
When a Duncan grapefruit and a trifoliate Orange were mixed together; they created the Citrumelo... you should see if you can find one of those bad boys, they can grow pretty huge.
I've seen cat vids with lime helmets, lemon tasting. And the cats seem fine. Think it depends on the cat. My cat (rip, 😿) couldn't eat chicken off the bone without hurling.
They are also common here in central Europe. You can order plants or seeds from many nurseries online and you can sometimes find the plants in parks. The plant is originally native to China.
I'm pretty sure eating swords builds ur tolerance to everything.
My stomach is like "oh so you're poisoning me now? pff whatever"
haha, vastly underrated comment.
@@WeirdExplorer Not sure if you also do fire eating but... if you do... same old same old.
@JJ *is
JJ and a contortionist
Trifoliate orange is approved by the CIA as a security hedge. Four inch thorns make it near impossible to climb without looking like you fought a tiger, and when fully grown, like the ones outside their facilities in virginia, will stop a truck at full speed.
That's a mean fucking tree.
😂 like how did you know this? Does the CIA have a landscaping book out there? Wait nevermind I asked.
@@let_uslunch8884 if they did a CIA gardening manual I would totally buy it...
Jokes aside I beleive they had a specialist put together a report for the best security plantings for their facilities. Fences and wire aren't that hard to bypass and look kind of ugly, but a nice hedge with pretty yellow/orange fruit looks nicer. Possibly cheaper to buy as well. And probably harder to bypass.
I believe they use a variety called "flying dragon" that has curved thorns and dense contorted branches that make it even more dense and vicious.
If the thorns don't stop them the nausea might
@@let_uslunch8884 **men in black knocks loudly on your door.**....
@@murunbuchstanzangur great to know, I will file the information away, you never can tell what's going to happen in these times. Or maybe we should be writing in code pay attention to every second and third letter... Ottawa inherent tamp innovative Ike listen.
Didn't mention the main thing that people use trifoliate orange for, which is... as a rootstock for other citrus trees. It makes a superb rootstock which tolerates cold, heavy soils, and is disease resistant (downsides: slower growing and dislikes heat and dry soil). The fact that the fruit is full of seeds is good in this regard, because it's the seeds that people want from those fruits - to plant to grow into rootstocks for more desirable fruits! :)
That would explain why one sprouted from the base of my Satsuma orange tree!
Found this out the hard way when the rootstock took over my baby lime tree. I sliced what I thought was a lime (ended up being an unripe one of these lovely fruit) and it was absolutely disgusting. Smelled really gross too. No wonder the tree was so green and lush. 😂
@@andrewscott891 Remove asap or you won’t have Satsuma oranges for long! See my post above. :)
You missed an opportunity to call the drink "Trifoliade"
damn it. you're right
My neighbor gave me a single fruit, telling me it was rare.
I planted it immediately, just stuck it in the ground.
It looks like a succulent, minimal small leaves,
the stems growing in curlicues,
covered with thorns.
Last year, 2019, when it was about 7 feet tall,
& 16 years old,
it suddenly burst into the most fragrant tiny white flowers.
Eleven flowers, and I got 11 fruits, covered in down.
I put them aside for seeds, didn't try them.
This year, the plant was covered in flowers, but it was cold & rainy, with no bees.
But today I saw I'm going to have tons of fruit.
This plant survived being indifferently transplanted, has never been fertilzed,
& survived the mega-snows of 2009, completely covered for months.
I love this little plant & will take him wherever I go.
I didn't even know what it was until last year.
I've read that the University of Alabama (?)
has a Flying Dragon (it's common name) hedge that is 150 years old, that has kept generations of frat boys hedged in.
I live in Zone 7- I don't know the limits of it's cold hardiness.
It looks otherworldly with a nice 7 foot high Scotch Broom- also easy to do- though that's not as cold hardy.
I love this plant.
It's a member of the family.
☺💖🌱🍊
It can survive well into -30c
Theres a hedge of these around a grave yard at Montecello in VA
You can graft other citrus varieties (including other cold hardy ones) to this tree.
You can order budwood from california citrus repository ^^
thats a flying dragon a subspecies of that thing, it literally survives everything and is a mean kind of plant, the thorns are nasty as hell, maintenance of it... ouch!
As for using poncirus in selection. I read scientific text about creation citrus varieties (I'm russian and i read russian acticle of Subtropical Research Center, Sochi) and there was information that poncirus gives cold stable plants but they don’t have good tastе qualities.
However, I think that poncirus are good and perspective. I bought this tree few weeks ago and now it grows at my home. (i'm a gardener student and i like growing some interesting plants)
Thank for your video! Btw, in russian we call poncirus not orange, but lemon ("wild lemon", "lemon trifoliata")
one thumbs down: probably the girlfriend
Aaaaaaand the second 👎probably her new bf!
@@stanervin6108 The third was from his cat.
Gigs 😂😂😂💔
18 now, probably the ex of her new bf and all her bffs.
I live in East TX,and in the rural areas,you encounter the trifoliate orange.We call them wild lemons.Very sour, and you can make a lemonade like drink out of it,tasty.
One person's poison is another person's medicine. Hoping your GF gets better soon. Also, LOVED the outro. Vostok is such a cutie!
Ive squeezed this fruit in my water and loved it. This tree it comes from is very beautiful and I love it
I have a trifoliate orange tree in my yard. I've never been brave enough to try it, but my baby niece loves the fruit. Maybe I'll try it now
I glad to see someone has finally come up with a recipe for trifoliate orange-ade. This is the first video I've seen for using trifoliate oranges to make a beverage. I've seen recipies for sour Calamondin orange-ade and sumac-ade, but never trifoliate orange-ade. I'm considering growing this plant where I live in Ohio.
Common rootstock in north Florida due to cold tolerance. Often the grafted-on citrus dies of cold leaving a slightly damaged trifoliate orange tree that has no trouble with the climate.
wow had no idea it gets that cold in florida
Yeah same here in Western NSW Australia 🇦🇺 we had a grove with mostly trifoliate rootstock used extensively for clay soil
@@toamaori Yes, in north florida zone 8 can get to 15 degrees and zone 9a can get to 20 degrees at night... it's rare, but happens every so many years. It's common to have very many mild winters and then a really bad winter that kills lots of subtropical or tropical plants, they usually just die to the roots, not completely, but have to regrow again.
That’s what happened to me haha. Our orange tree died and now I have a poncirus.
Yup...I bought a Limequat online that didn't like something and died.
From the rootstock emerged these weird-looking leaves,and a bit of Googling brought me here...
The way your head just pops into the video at 6:38 made me laugh so much. There's something about the way you just dangle it in there to say that line that is completely hilarious!
I was cracking up laughing to myself 🤣. I think that's my favorite part of the whole video.
i think it's not toxic in the usual sense, but as with a lot of essential oils the terpene profile can trigger reactions. not a lot of people know that essential oils are notorious for causing dermatitis (like, more cases than maybe anything else), and yet people are always putting them on their skin. and it's a sensitivity that can develop with use. iirc i think the issue with trifoliata is that the juice has unusual levels of terpenes, but the skin is about the same as any other citrus skin
Terpene is what some steroids are made out of right?
@@trapdoorguppi no
@@trapdoorguppi terpenes are like flavour compounds there are many of them and they can vary wildy
They are commonly hunted down in, and bred into cannabis
And like I said can vary from sweet citrus
To astringent pine
Or earthy musk
Even cheesey
I love those things. We have them in North Georgia. We call them wild lemons, but I'm sure they are the same thing. Very sticky and sour. I never eat them raw, they make great juice, and I squeeze them onto lots of stuff on the grill. Very cool review
Try salting them, great condiment for stews. I’m making a vid on how to do this for Georgia’s only native citrus
your girlfriend may be sensitive to latex, I have had this reaction to eating too much jackfruit.
She certainly wouldnt like condoms
@@DeutscheDemokratischeRepublik why tf would you even say that
Any other fruits with latex?
@@assass.oebeeseo just taking the job at making cursed comments
@@assass.oebeeseo because condoms are made of latex babe
I planted two of these a while back (the Flying Dragon variety), just starting to get some decent yields, this year looks to be good. Wonderful smell, and it's a neat looking bush. If you slice several into thin wedges and stuff them into a bottle of vodka and let it infuse a few days it makes a GREAT flowery floral citrus vodka that goes wonderful with Sprite or ginger ale.
Very sorry for your gf, probably gave over a dozen folks some vodka and it universally went over well.
Definitely going to try and make some kind of preserves this year.
The edits were on point with this one lol. Your poor girlfriend! And once again, your cat steals the spotlight with her adorableness.
it's her show afterall
I love how these smell, reminds me a little of gardenia. Definitely resinous. Had one a few years back that I let my roommate smell and he thought it was disgusting. Adorable furbaby
It is an eye opener, Thank you for demistyfying the fruit taste and its flavors. Now I need to find one to try for myself.
Yay I’m planting it this weekend! I love lemonades and grapefruit ♥️
I love all the harsh intaking of breath interludes.
For those wondering, Poncirus trifoliata can withstand drops into the upper negatives (F), and so is pretty much hardy in a continental zone 6b, and can be pushed to as low as zone 5b with varying levels of winter protection.
It would be interesting to know what chemical in the fruit causes those symptoms, and more so why you weren't affected. great video as always.
The bitter chemical is poncirin. That might be the sensitizer.
Your spliced in reminders are hilarious.
Sounds tasty. I just got one and was mostly excited to see it's gnarly twisted limbs. I'm now excited for the fruit too.
People are often surprised that the same chemical can cause different effects in different people. It’s more obvious with stuff like marijuana or alcohol, but even “poisons” effect people differently
I am no expert but I am pretty sure the bit about boiling the waxy, resiny, rinds with the simple syrup was the kicker.
Don't forget they're a bit fuzzy too...
Thanks for the ecipe, especially the zest bit. My seedling may have fuit in 3-4 years.
I've got this as a rootstock on one of my citrus trees, and it started suckering. Beautifully lethal looking. I removed it, tried to get it to root, failed miserably. I think it was a punishment for my fantasies of it growing big enough to use as a neighbour deterrent.
Trifoliate orange is one of the harder citrus to get growing from a cutting.
It's best to take cuttings from wood that's year or so old. I've had moderate success by using rooting hormone and sticking them into a container of sterilized perlite with a bag over top. It can still take several months for them to put out roots.
If you can get them it's better to use seeds, there are plenty of them (as shown in the video) and they root deeper. Also thanks to a quirk in citrus biology Trifoliate Orange (and quite a few other citrus breeds) usually produce clones of the parent tree when grown from seed, which is another reason they're commonly used as rootstock.
Should have let it fruit and used seed or find the fruit and grow it from seed it’s a much healthier root mass from seed with a true tap root you won’t get from cuttings
Brian McCarrier I should have opened your comment b4 commenting
@@brianmccarrier1605 That's the procedure I followed, but from what you say, perhaps I gave up on the cutting too soon. Oops...
I've been looking for plants, or seeds, for awhile now but no joy here in uber-restrictive NZ.
Thank you for all the information!
@@dutempsjadis1066 If it suckers again, use air-layering to get it to form roots before you cut it off. Also, many rootstocks are Citrus hybrids so it could also be Trifoliate x some other Citrus species rather than pure Trifoliate.
I know these, they smell wonderful.I once made a syrup with them & some honey& walnuts. Very delicious. No ill effects in my case.(but yeah will keep in mind that some people may react badly to it)
Found one of these growing in Philadelphia a few years ago. I love the smell, although some people are very averse to the smell... I candied the find, but unfortunately some of the pith came with it so most pieces were extremely bitter. I used them as a cocktail ingredient and a dare for risk-taking friends. Will have to try making juice out of em!
Thanks for sharing!
I found one of these growing in a park near my house. It's thorns are as big as my finger!!
Makes a good rootstock, and from Zone 6 south, a very effective living fence. Great Swallowtail caterpillars will eat it, like Citrus, though the normal northern hosts are toothache tree (Zanthoxylum) and wafer ash (Ptelea).
The flavor sounds like it would be my favorite fruit... I really want to try it but I don't have access to it and don't want to poison myself lol
I’m making a vid on salting and fermenting the rind in its own juice- great condiment for stews. Also added vanilla and cardamom to one batch which tastes amazing and works as a topper on savory grain bowls
There was a trifoliate orange bush in my old neighborhood in Philly and I frequently grabbed them as I walked by and ate them. They aren't very good as citrus goes but it never caused me a problem.
Found this in prospect park in NCY 2 years ago. Picked a few. Made a juice. Puked my brains out.
Did it smell fishy?
@@user-en5hg5mw7l Not that I remember
I’ve heard these are often used for grafting and hybridization due to their genetic diversity and cold tolerance
So interesting! I like the juice, and when I was studying horticulture in Arizona 40+ years ago, it was in the Poncirus genus. Thanks for this one.
The dislikes.
1 - From his girlfriend.
1 - From his girlfriend's parents.
damn she's got her grandparents, uncles, nieces, and nephews disliking this
And - himself ;)
This was great! I stumbled upon this growing wild in Maryland and transplanted some shoots into my yard. You didn't mention the crazy thorns on the plant, but you may have only seen the fruit. Fruit smells wonderful and I like your description of lime + grapefruit + floral.
This was so cool. I loved the inserted warnings! Now, I want to try it, since it sounds delicious. Love your cat too!
Great episode, well done and I enjoyed the advisories.
It is a True citrus (not a hibrid like 95% of the citrus fruit we eat), It is used for hedges and for rootstock for grafting other citrus because of the frost resistance. Dry peel is also used for tea. Cheers, your videos are great.
Jared should start trying his sour and bitter stuff with miracle berries so there are two different reviews in one!!
I live in Northern Virginia and I have one of these plants. Cold weather is not a problem. It is not invasive. It is in my front yard. The thorns on the plant are mighty. During the summer, I need to spray it about 3 times because tiny insects get under the leaves and they turn yellow and drop. In the spring, the bush gets covered with small white flowers. My bush is about 15 feet tall. The branches are very stiff and hard. Maybe the wood would be good for making knife handles? The fruit is extremely sour. Smelling the fruit leaves you with no doubt that this is a citrus plant. I obtained this plant from a company here in Virginia named "EdibleLandscaping.com". It was a cutting from a stem that they put a rooting hormone on and stuck it in a small pot. I went home and planted it. The big attraction for me was the gnarly shape of the stems and the huge thorns. If you plant this under your window, there is no burglar that would ever challenge it. It produces many many fruit and I have no pollinator for it. It pollinates itself. This link will take you to the website where I got mine. ediblelandscaping.com/products/tropicals/Citrus/TrifoliateOrange.php A basketball hoop is 10 feet tall. My plant is several feet higher than 10 feet.
Great video! I love your cat.
Thank you! 😊
Always so insightfull and objective!
Need to mention, that because if its cold hardiness, it is the normal rootstock to graft all varieties of comercial citrus.
Sometimes it even replaces the original planted citrus varieties because if its strengh. Greetings!
Cute kitty cat ending!!!
Loved this episode! What a unique "orange"! :)
Glad you enjoyed it!
Lol I would call it a "yellow" now 😄
@Brendan Wright Ponzu is a Japanese true Citrus, I think, though it might just be the flavored seasoning sauce made of same (& soy sauce).
I made juice from one and immediately got diarrhea, still worth it bro, it was quite tasty.
That’s the spirit!
I have one of these trees in my yard and one year I made a syrup out of the juice of the fruit and then used that to make cookies. My mom loved the cookies but they were very rich and I didn't care for them very much but they were very citrusy.. and very good, if you only ate one or two. That being said, my mom ate several and loved them, so I gave her all of them. 😆
I don't particularly care for key lime pie or lemon pie and the cookies tasted very similar to those, so, if anyone is interested in that, try making syrup out of them.
#spectacular #educationalvideo #howto aspect and #humour are really good! #like
I really love trifoliate orange; a grower near me has the flying dragon variety. The flavor is like no other citrus I've tried, but the resin they release is ridiculous to clean up. When I extract the fruit with vodka, all of my equipment takes a double application of CitraSolv degreaser/degummer to get most of it off. More resin recrystallizes after a week or so at the bottom of the bottle of the strained extract. Well worth it, though, for a really delicious extract I can use in cooking and cocktails.
Finnally!!!! Waited so long for this video, thank you!!
This was a really fun video. Thanks!
I've been trying to figure out what this plant was for years. I've seen two plants in Oklahoma (very many years apart) and I'm strangely drawn to the weird smell of it. I'd like to infuse the outer peel into tea, like bergamot. It has a similar strangeness. Maybe a new kind of Earl Grey could come of it. I'd definitely like to try your bergamot tea infusion method with it. Maybe with green tea and call it "Earl Bright". See if it makes anyone sick before I market it.
Interesting fruit! Sleepy Vostok is so cute.
Ate this once and started throwing up from my ears
These are actually invasive where I live. I go hiking through the forest where they grow in thick groves where you have to duck and weave making sure you wear glasses and a motorcycle jacket so you don’t get punctured. One day I fell off a 10 foot sand embankment onto a pile of the things. I can’t even describe what that was like but the oranges taste good
There's a trifoliate orange tree near where I live. I love the smell of the fruits but the taste of the juice is strong l. I've used it in margaritas before but definitely noticed it seemed to unsettle my stomach a bit. The tree is incredibly hardy, its survived incredibly cold ice weather in north central Texas.
Do the flowers smell good?
It's the rootstock they graft to to achieve a dwarf citrus because it's slow growing as a rootstock
I have a kaffir lime grafted onto one . Also cook a half into almost any curry ... yum
Hi from western Australia
You make the sort of content that I cannot imagine any rational person disliking. I love this channel so much
fun fact, the usda did a bunch of experiments trying to hybridize the trifoliate orange with other citrus fruits to make them cold hardy. and im fairly certain it worked because there are lemons that used to grow in a cow pasture near where i live (east Tennessee). ps. its actually a really interesting story about how they got there so hit me up if anyone wants to hear the whole thing.
We're working on building a permaculture forest of native foods in Arkansas to build up the land for wildlife. If you could get me some seeds, that would be rad.
@@manslaughterinc.9135 I might be able to! I'm unsure if they are still there, but if I can get up there in the next week ill let you know! P.S. the seeds are likely to contain more trifoliate orange genetics than the plant they came from because they are open-pollinated, hope that's alright!
It makes a great beverage in Japan like our lemonade and they just mix it with alot of sugar or honey and very often liquor.
How does it compare to a yuzu? Reason why I ask is I have a tree in the backyard that seems to be a cross between used to and trifoliate and can’t decide
I've been given a couple of these plants and I intend to grow them. My hope is that I can use them as a lemon replacement to add acidity to food, i.e. squeezing it over cooked green veggies or adding to a sauce etc. Would you say that it is reasonable to expect they can be used in this manner?
You’ve got an Iron stomach from all your travels.
Loved this video! So entertaining 😬
This is worthy of some of the paranormal videos I watch. Looks like fun, but also terrifying.
A measuring cup! It’s a lot more fun to watch you just pour ingredients together while you eyeball them. I love your show. So many fruits I hadn’t heard of.
the dislikes are
-his girlfriend
-that one person that says that he pelled it wrong
-that one person that says that he juiced it wrong
I'm still waiting for the "you pronounced it wrong" dislike.
@@WeirdExplorer im sorry germany doesnt rlly teach english
Oh my gosh! My cat looks so similar to yours! Like same markings and everything. I rescued her, so I have no idea what breed she is and figured she wasn't anything normal.
aw twins
The inside looks a lot like a Filipino calamansi, and the way you describe the taste sounds a lot like it too.
I have this in my yard!
You've seemed familiar to me for a while without me being able to put my finger on it. You remind me of Charlie Cox in "Daredevil." Love your channel! Cool combination of foodie stuff and botany stuff (even if the latter is unintentional). Gives me a good idea of what I should and shouldn't try to grow.
That kitty is so soft and sweet.. and SUCCULENT!!!! 😺😸😺😾🙀🧟♂️🙀👽🙀👾🙀👻🙀🤖🧒👹🙀👿🙀☻🙀💩🙀👶😺☠👶☠😿🦑😺
First rule, don't feed your GF anything that you've had in the fridge for a week.
Second rule, always have some chloroform on hand just in case.
Oh wait...
"Fuzzy, kind of like a peach"
Yeah that'd mess me up too. Peach skin burns like crazy!
I'm growing some in zone 6 massachusetts. I want to try this so bad!
Tridoliade, a delicious citrus drink.
Wow! You have commercials on your vids now? Guess crossing 100k subscribers threshold must have bumped you up to a monetizing level💸. You deserve it! Thanks for entertaining me with your weird fruit adventures 😁
Oh I've been monetizing the videos for years. I'm surprised you haven't gotten any ads!
Aahh.... resinous. Not bad tasting. Just a absolute nightmare to clean up...Мixed the pith with honey...
Nobody had any negatice reactions to it btw..
It is considered invasive, but maybe that is because no one uses it for anything, otherwise it might be considered as a wonderful cold hardy producer of a special fruit.
I have only found fruit on them here one or two times in 20 year so some woods dweller(s) must find them fine as they are sans addition of sugar.
They really produced a lot of blossoms this year
You should try sumac-ade made from the stag horn sumac
This is amazing I wish it was more available
Careful what you wish for not many plants are literally as dangerous. The thorns can kill you no joke.
@@mattlloyd9054 fun
When a Duncan grapefruit and a trifoliate Orange were mixed together; they created the Citrumelo... you should see if you can find one of those bad boys, they can grow pretty huge.
Fire resistance : 0%
Cold resistance : 0%
Lightning resistance : 0%
Poison resistance : Maxed
tree:
Heat resistance : 50%
Cold resistance : Maxed
Intruder resistance : Maxed
Poison emittance : Maxed
Recently moved into a new place in Northern Tennessee and found one of these in the back yard. Gonna try out making a marmalade or something come fall
Salted lemon recipe works great, add cardamom and vanilla
Reminds me of the nasty full of seed "lemons" on my Meyer Lemon tree. Not lemony, mostly orangy lemony.
Cats hate citruses! But yours seems to tolerate. And many thanks for the review. I've always believed it to be inedible, referring to botany books.
I've seen cat vids with lime helmets, lemon tasting. And the cats seem fine. Think it depends on the cat. My cat (rip, 😿) couldn't eat chicken off the bone without hurling.
I would love to grow some of those seeds. So sad that there is a ocean separating me from the US.
It isn't the ocean, it is the pirates.
They are also common here in central Europe. You can order plants or seeds from many nurseries online and you can sometimes find the plants in parks. The plant is originally native to China.
I have tons of these I can send you some seeds
Yay calico kitty, I love mine.
That title has some sick bars
We have a less seedy version of it in India. In West Bengal, we call it "paati lebu" in Bengali. It is really common here. It is used as lime.
Tifoliate oranges must be COOKED before consumption. Always research something before ingesting it!
Just learned that my lemon tree has been grafted onto the rootstock of this
"This mo-fo right here" 🤣