Lemon
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Lemon | ||||||||||||||||
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Missing image Lemon_8FruitAndFlower_wb.jpg Lemon fruit and flower | ||||||||||||||||
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Citrus × limon |
Lemons are the citrus fruit from the tree Citrus × limon, a hybrid of cultivated origin. They are cultivated primarily for their juice, though the pulp and rind are also used, primarily in cooking or mixing. Lemon juice is about 5% citric acid, which gives lemons a sour taste.
This is a small tree, to 6 m (20 ft) but usually smaller. The branches are thorny, and form an open crown. The leaves are elliptical-acuminate. Flowers are violet and streaked in the interior and white on the outside.
The first description of the lemon, which had been introduced from India two centuries earlier, is found in Arabic writings from the 12th century. More recent research has identified lemons in the ruins of Pompeii. The origin of the name lemon is Persian (from Persian لیمو Limu). They were cultivated in Genoa in the mid-fifteenth century, and appeared in the Azores in 1494. Lemons were once used by the British Royal navy to combat scurvy, as they provided a large amount of vitamin C. The Royal Navy originally thought lemons were overripe limes which they resemble and their sailors became known as limeys, not lemonys.
Both lemons and limes are regularly served as lemonade (natural lemon with water and sugar) or limeade, its equivalent, or as a garnish for drinks such as cola with a slice either inside or on the rim of the glass. Lemon juice is typically dripped onto battered fish dishes in restaurants in the United Kingdom and other countries; the acidic juice neutralizes the taste of amines in fish. Some people like to eat lemons as fruit.
Propagation is by grafting as the stock is vunerable to cankers and dry rot.
Lemon juice contains approximately 500 milligrams of vitamin C and 50 grams of citric acid per liter.
Gallery
References
- Paola Lanzara and Mariella Pizzetti Simon & Schuster's Guide to Trees pp. 191. A Fireside Book Published by Simon & Schuster, INC.
External links
- Brief sketches of the history and botany of lemons and other citrus. (http://www.botany.com/citrus.html)bg:Лимон
ca:Llimona da:Citron (Citrus limon) de:Zitrone es:Limón eo:Citrono fr:Citron gl:Limón nl:Citroen nb:Sitron nn:Sitron ja:レモン pl:Cytryna zwyczajna pt:Limão-galego simple:Lemon sv:Citron zh:柠檬