Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

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Before opening a jar, see where the natural peanut butter comes from! A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Before opening a jar, see where the natural peanut butter comes from!

Peanut Butter Tree (Bunchosia argentea)

Before opening a jar, see where the natural peanut butter comes from!
  • Peanut Butter Tree (Bunchosia argentea) is a small tropical tree with one of the most surprising fruits on earth. Its red, fleshy berries taste just like peanut butter - creamy, nutty, and sweet, with a texture that melts in your mouth. No nuts, no sugar, no processing - just pure tropical flavor, straight from nature!
  • Native to Central and South America, this rare fruit has been a favorite among tropical fruit collectors for decades. The tree stays compact, reaching only about 8-10 feet tall, and can even be kept as a bush. It's perfect for small gardens, patios, or large containers, and it can thrive indoors with enough light. Within just 2 to 3 years from seed, it begins to reward you with clusters of yellow flowers followed by rich, red fruits that taste like peanut butter candy.
  • The fruit isn't just fun - it's healthy, too. It's rich in antioxidants, vitamins, and beneficial plant compounds that support the immune system and overall wellness. Kids love it, adults can’t stop talking about it, and gardeners love how easy it is to grow.
  • If you’re looking for something truly unique - an edible curiosity that sparks conversation and delights the taste buds - the Peanut Butter Tree is the one. Grow your own, and the next time someone opens a jar of peanut butter, you can smile and say, "Mine grows on a tree!"


🛒 Try the real peanut butter fruit

📚 Learn more:

📱 How to grow the Amazing Peanut Butter Tree - in one short video

#Food_Forest #Nature_Wonders

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Longevity spinach omelet: quick-n-fun exotic recipes. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Longevity spinach omelet: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Gynura - Longevity spinach

Gynura - Longevity spinach

Longevity spinach omelet

Longevity spinach omelet

🟢Chop Gynura leaves into beaten eggs with garlic.
  • 🟢A health-boosting twist on a classic omelet.

🍴 Longevity spinach omelet: quick-n-fun exotic recipes 🍳

Ingredients

  • Fresh Gynura (Longevity Spinach) leaves
  • 3 eggs
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • Salt to taste
  • Cooking oil or butter

Instructions

  1. Chop Gynura leaves finely.
  2. Beat eggs with minced garlic and a pinch of salt.
  3. Stir in chopped Gynura leaves.
  4. Heat oil or butter in a pan and pour in the mixture.
  5. Cook until the omelet is set and golden. Serve warm.

🛒 Plant Longevity Spinach and live long

📚 Learn more:
📱 What is better than Spinach

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Plant a fruit tree - and breathe easier: fruit might be the surprising key to healthier lungs. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Plant a fruit tree - and breathe easier: fruit might be the surprising key to healthier lungs

Plant a fruit tree - and breathe easier: fruit might be the surprising key to healthier lungs
🍒 Plant a fruit tree - and breathe easier: fruit might be the surprising key to healthier lungs

  • Fresh fruit doesn’t just taste good - it can literally help you breathe better!

  • A new study presented at the European Respiratory Society Congress found that women who ate at least four portions of fruit a day had slower declines in lung function compared to those who ate less. Researchers believe antioxidants in fruit may help protect the lungs from the damaging effects of air pollution.

  • Air pollution is everywhere, and more than 90% of people worldwide are exposed to levels above safe limits. But the good news is, your diet can make a difference. Fruits are packed with antioxidants and anti-inflammatory compounds that help your body fight off the oxidative stress caused by tiny airborne particles.

  • The study showed that women who ate plenty of fruit had stronger lungs despite being exposed to fine particulate pollution (PM2.5) from cars and industry. The difference wasn’t small either - their lung capacity dropped significantly less over time than in those with low fruit intake.

  • So planting fruit trees isn’t just about homegrown flavor or saving a trip to the store. It’s about protecting your health in a polluted world. Whether it’s mangoes, avocados, guavas, or starfruit, every harvest brings you cleaner nutrition and a cleaner breath of life.


🛒 Grow fruit - grow your health

📚 Learn more:

#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover

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Figs with honey and nuts: quick-n-fun exotic recipes. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Figs with honey and nuts: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Figs with honey and nuts: quick-n-fun exotic recipes Figs with honey and nuts: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
🟡Simple and irresistible.

🍴 Figs with honey and nuts: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Ingredients

  • Fresh ripe figs
  • Honey
  • Chopped nuts (walnuts or almonds)

Instructions

  1. Cut figs in half and place them cut side up on a baking tray.
  2. Roast lightly at 350°F for about 10 minutes until warm and slightly caramelized.
  3. Drizzle with honey and sprinkle with chopped nuts.
  4. Serve warm or at room temperature. Simple and irresistible.


🛒 Plant fig trees and always have healthy desserts

📚 Learn more:
The fruit tree that every garden must have

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Guava beats banana in the potassium game. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Guava beats banana in the potassium game

Tropical Guava - Psidium guajava

Tropical Guava - Psidium guajava

🍉 Guava beats banana in the potassium game
  • 🍉Everyone talks about bananas when it comes to potassium, but guava (Tropical Guava - Psidium guajava) quietly beats them! One cup of guava packs around 688 milligrams of potassium, compared to about 450 in a banana!
  • 🍉Potassium is essential for strong bones, steady blood pressure, muscle function, and a healthy nervous system. Adults need between 2,600 and 3,400 mg daily, according to the National Institute of Health - so adding guava to your fruit bowl is a smart move.
  • 🍉Guavas are common across the tropics - from Mexico to the Caribbean - with green or yellow skin and beautiful pink or off-white flesh. Sweet, aromatic, and easy to grow in warm climates, guava is one tropical fruit that truly earns its place in the garden and on your plate.


🛒 Your body needs potassium - your garden grows it on guava tree!

📚 Learn more:

#Food_Forest #Guava #Discover

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Guava fudge: quick-n-fun exotic recipes. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Guava fudge: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Guava fruit

Guava fruit

Guava fudge

Guava fudge

🔴Cook guava pulp with sugar until thick, pour into a pan, cut into squares.
🔴A tropical fudge-like sweet.

🍴 Guava fudge: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Ingredients

  • 2 cups ripe guava pulp
  • 1½ cups sugar
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice (optional)

Instructions

  1. Cook guava pulp with sugar in a pan over medium heat.
  2. Stir constantly until mixture thickens and pulls away from sides.
  3. Pour into a greased pan and let it cool.
  4. Cut into small squares and enjoy your tropical fudge.

🛒 Grow your own sweet guava fruit

📚 Learn more:

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Chaya stir-fry: quick-n-fun exotic recipes. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Chaya stir-fry: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Cnidoscolus aconitifolius - Maya Spinach Tree, Chaya

Cnidoscolus aconitifolius - Maya Spinach Tree, Chaya

Chaya stir-fry

Chaya stir-fry

🍴 Chaya stir-fry: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
  • 🟢Boil chaya leaves first (to remove toxins), then stir-fry with onions and eggs.
  • 🟢Nutritious and earthy with a spinach-like taste.

    Chaya Stir-Fry (Maya Spinach)

    Ingredients

    • 2 cups Chaya leaves, boiled first to remove toxins
    • 1 small onion, sliced
    • 2 eggs, lightly beaten
    • 1 tbsp cooking oil or butter
    • Salt to taste

    Instructions

    1. Boil Chaya leaves for 15-20 minutes before eating. This is essential to destroy natural toxins. Never eat raw Chaya leaves.
    2. Drain and chop the boiled leaves.
    3. Heat oil in a pan and saut onions until soft.
    4. Add the boiled Chaya leaves and stir-fry for 2-3 minutes.
    5. Push leaves to one side, pour in the eggs, and scramble.
    6. Mix everything together and season with salt. Serve warm.


🛒 Add nutritious Chaya to your garden and kitchen

📚 Learn more:

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement

Tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement

Tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement

🍑 11 tropical fruits to eat instead of taking a fiber supplement
  • When we think of tropical fruit, we picture sweetness, sunshine, and exotic flavors packed with vitamin C. But beneath all that juicy goodness lies another gift: dietary fiber - quietly working to support digestion, feed the gut microbiome, and help keep blood sugar steady.
  • Avocado leads the pack among tropical fruits for fiber content. One creamy, ripe fruit can provide around 10 grams of fiber, roughly a third of an adult’s daily need. And there’s more to avocado than fiber - it’s also rich in healthy fats, micronutrients, and that silky texture everyone loves.
  • Other tropical fruits bring their own kind of fiber strength. Guava delivers up to 9 grams per cup, plus a burst of vitamin C.
  • Mango offers about 3 grams in half a fruit, especially when eaten with some of the skin.
  • Pineapple, though not always seen as a fiber powerhouse, still contributes around 2 grams per cup, along with bromelain, the enzyme that helps digestion.
  • Jackfruit’s fibrous pulp makes it another standout - it’s so meaty, it’s even used as a plant-based substitute in savory dishes.
  • Sapote fruit (Mamey, Canistel) and Sapodilla add fiber with a smooth, custard-like texture.
  • Adventurous tropical varieties like Annona (custard apple, soursop) may not top the charts in fiber numbers, but their soft, fibrous flesh still adds value: about 1.3 grams of fiber per 100 grams of fruit.
  • Bananas contain both soluble and insoluble fiber; the soluble part (mainly pectin) helps control blood sugar and appetite, while the insoluble fiber aids regularity.
  • Mulberries are rich in insoluble fiber, especially in their skin, supporting digestion and promoting healthy bowel movements.
  • Dragon fruit offers a mix of soluble fiber in its juicy flesh and insoluble fiber from its tiny edible seeds, which help support gut health and feed good bacteria.


These fruits aren’t just delicious - they help you meet your daily fiber needs in ways that are far more enjoyable (and sustainable) than taking supplements. And when home gardeners, farmers, or tropical communities grow and share them, it’s a double win: nutrition and tradition hand in hand.

✔️ Tropical fiber power: tips for getting more fiber from tropical fruits
  • ⏺Eat whole, not juiced. Most of the fiber is in the pulp, skin, and seeds. Juicing removes much of that goodness.
  • ⏺Mix it up. Tropical fruits are great, but balance them with legumes, whole grains, nuts, and veggies for a full fiber range.
  • ⏺Take it slow. If your diet is low in fiber, increase gradually to avoid bloating or discomfort.
  • ⏺Drink plenty of water. Fiber works best when paired with hydration.
  • ⏺Mind the ripeness. Unripe fruits can have more resistant starch, another form of fiber.
  • ⏺Get creative. Toss tropical fruits into smoothies, salsas, breakfast bowls, or even desserts - a tasty stealth-fiber strategy.


🛒 Plant a fruit tree to harvest your fruit tomorrow

📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit health benefits guide - what fruit and edibles can help with health issues and vitamin deficiencies, Part 1 and Part 2.

#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to

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Macadamia nut crusted fish: quick-n-fun exotic recipes. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Macadamia nut crusted fish: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

Macadamia nuts

Macadamia nuts

Macadamia nut crusted fish

Macadamia nut crusted fish

🍴 Macadamia nut crusted fish: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
  • 🟡Coat fish fillets in crushed Macadamias, pan-fry until golden.
  • 🟡Crispy, buttery, and delicious.

Macadamia nut crusted fish

Ingredients

  • 2 fish fillets (such as snapper or tilapia)
  • 1/2 cup crushed macadamia nuts
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1 tbsp butter or oil for frying
  • Salt and pepper to taste
  • Lime wedges for serving

Instructions

  1. Pat fish fillets dry and season with salt and pepper.
  2. Dip each fillet in beaten egg, then coat with crushed macadamia nuts.
  3. Heat butter or oil in a skillet over medium heat.
  4. Pan-fry fillets 3-4 minutes per side until golden brown and cooked through.
  5. Serve with lime wedges and enjoy.

🛒 Grow your own Macadamia Tree

📚 Learn more:
Where do Macadamia nuts come from

#Food_Forest #Recipes

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Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure. A Top Tropicals Garden Blog post.

Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure

Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure
Avocado leaf tea: island secret for a calm heart and blood pressure

  • 🍃 You see that Avocado tree in your yard? Don't just love it for the fruit - the leaves carry magic too! Old folks in the tropics will tell you - never throw away the avocado leaves. They’ve been used for generations to brew a tea that helps steady the heart and ease high blood pressure.

  • 🍃 When life gets busy and your heart starts beating too fast, this tea helps it find its rhythm again. The leaf holds flavonoids and quercetin - fancy words for what nature been doing all along: keeping the blood flowing smooth and the body at peace. Folks say it also helps with digestion and keeps the liver happy.

  • 🍃 Avocado leaf tea

    Ingredients

    • 3 to 4 fresh avocado leaves
    • 2 cups water
    • Optional: honey, lemon, or cinnamon stick

    Instructions

    1. Rinse the avocado leaves well.
    2. Place them in a small pot with 2 cups of water.
    3. Bring to a gentle simmer and let it cook for about 10 minutes.
    4. Strain the tea and add honey, lemon, or cinnamon if desired.
    5. Sip slowly and enjoy the calm, earthy flavor.

  • 🍃 They say it helps the belly, calms the mind, and keeps the liver strong. Maybe that’s science, maybe it’s just island truth - but it surely does the body good! Some call it bush medicine, others just call it good sense. Either way, it’s a simple garden remedy that’s been soothing hearts long before pills and prescriptions came around.


🛒 Plant an Avocado tree and help your body stay healthy

📚 Learn more:
Tropical fruit and plants that help keep blood pressure in balance, Part 1, and Part 2.

#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover #How_to

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