Garden Blog - Top Tropicals
Tropical almond brittle: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
🍴 Tropical almond brittle: quick-n-fun exotic recipes
🛒 Grow your own almonds
📚 Learn more:
▫️Where do almonds come from?
#Food_Forest #Recipes
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- 🟢Caramelize sugar, stir in roasted tropical almonds (Terminalia catappa), spread thin.
- 🟢Let cool, harden, and break into crunchy, nutty shards.
- 2 cups roasted tropical almonds (Terminalia catappa)
- 1 1/2 cups sugar
- 1/2 cup water
- 1 tbsp butter
- Pinch of salt
- Combine sugar, water, and salt in a saucepan.
- Cook over medium heat until sugar caramelizes to a golden amber color.
- Remove from heat and quickly stir in roasted tropical almonds.
- Pour onto parchment paper and spread into a thin layer.
- Let cool completely, then break into brittle shards.
Tropical Almond Brittle
Ingredients
Instructions
🛒 Grow your own almonds
📚 Learn more:
▫️Where do almonds come from?
#Food_Forest #Recipes
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Hurricane season is not over! Here is the safest place
Cat Timo
☂️ Hurricane season is not over! Here is the safest place
"Shelter yourself from the storm on the inside. Others can only hold the umbrella." - Mahatma Gandhi
🐈📸 Cat Timo on a rainy day at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden
#PeopleCats #Quotes
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"Shelter yourself from the storm on the inside. Others can only hold the umbrella." - Mahatma Gandhi
🐈📸 Cat Timo on a rainy day at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden
#PeopleCats #Quotes
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
What to do and not to do before a cold snap?
What to do and not to do before a cold snap?
Growing tropical plants outdoors? Here are a few practical notes for your cold protection guide.
⭕️ 5 things to DO to prepare your plants before a cold snap:
1. Water well. A well-hydrated plant is stronger. Juicy stems and leaves handle cold better than dry ones.
2. Add mulch. A thick layer around the base helps insulate the roots and keep them warm.
3. Block the wind. Move pots to a sheltered spot or set up a windbreak.
4. Cover at night, uncover by day. Use frost cloth, blankets, or plastic at night - but remove during the day so plants don’t overheat in the sun and can get as much light as possible.
5. Add gentle heat if needed. Christmas lights or a small heater can help - just use caution and make sure everything is safe.
❌ 5 most common mistakes, what NOT to do before or during a cold snap:
1. Don’t prune. Fresh cuts and new growth are tender and will freeze first.
2. Don’t overwater. Cold and soggy roots can rot. Keep soil moist, not soaked. Water just enough to quench the plant’s thirst and fill stems and leaves with moisture. Cold and wet is a dangerous combination.
3. Don’t let plants dry out either. Wilted, thirsty plants are more likely to suffer cold damage. Cold and dry can be just as harmful as cold and wet.
4. Don’t use dry fertilizer. It can burn roots in cold soil. A gentle liquid feed like amino-acid Sunshine Boosters is an exception and safe to use with every watering. Its intake naturally slows down as watering decreases.
5. Don’t just watch the thermometer. Duration and wind chill matter. A long cold night with wind can do more harm than a brief freeze.
✔️ Keep these in mind, and your plants will thank you when the cold passes!
#How_to
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
Growing tropical plants outdoors? Here are a few practical notes for your cold protection guide.
⭕️ 5 things to DO to prepare your plants before a cold snap:
1. Water well. A well-hydrated plant is stronger. Juicy stems and leaves handle cold better than dry ones.
2. Add mulch. A thick layer around the base helps insulate the roots and keep them warm.
3. Block the wind. Move pots to a sheltered spot or set up a windbreak.
4. Cover at night, uncover by day. Use frost cloth, blankets, or plastic at night - but remove during the day so plants don’t overheat in the sun and can get as much light as possible.
5. Add gentle heat if needed. Christmas lights or a small heater can help - just use caution and make sure everything is safe.
❌ 5 most common mistakes, what NOT to do before or during a cold snap:
1. Don’t prune. Fresh cuts and new growth are tender and will freeze first.
2. Don’t overwater. Cold and soggy roots can rot. Keep soil moist, not soaked. Water just enough to quench the plant’s thirst and fill stems and leaves with moisture. Cold and wet is a dangerous combination.
3. Don’t let plants dry out either. Wilted, thirsty plants are more likely to suffer cold damage. Cold and dry can be just as harmful as cold and wet.
4. Don’t use dry fertilizer. It can burn roots in cold soil. A gentle liquid feed like amino-acid Sunshine Boosters is an exception and safe to use with every watering. Its intake naturally slows down as watering decreases.
5. Don’t just watch the thermometer. Duration and wind chill matter. A long cold night with wind can do more harm than a brief freeze.
✔️ Keep these in mind, and your plants will thank you when the cold passes!
#How_to
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
I love Fridays!
🐱 I love Fridays!
"Me by the end of Friday business day"
Are you also looking forward to the weekend?
🐈📸 Cat James Coconuts is a hard worker at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden
#PeopleCats
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"Me by the end of Friday business day"
Are you also looking forward to the weekend?
🐈📸 Cat James Coconuts is a hard worker at TopTropicals PeopleCats.Garden
#PeopleCats
🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals
What is a Dwarf Condo Avocado that fruits at 3 ft tall?
Dwarf Condo Avocado Fuerte
What is a Dwarf Condo Avocado that fruits at 3 ft tall?
🟢 Wurtz (Little Cado): A true dwarf avocado tree that stays small and grows well in containers. It can even produce fruit indoors near a sunny window.
Condo avocados are a great way to enjoy homegrown avocados even if you don’t have a big yard. Just give them sun, good soil, and regular care - and you’ll have fresh avocados right on your porch!
✔️ Check outAvocado Variety Guide interactive chart. Sort them by flower type A or B, tree habit, fruit shape and quality, cold hardiness, origin, season and more!
🛒 Shop Avocado varieties
📖 Our Book: Avocado Variety Guide, Snack or Guacamole?
📚Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Avocado
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- Every fruit lover dreams of growing lots of avocado varieties, but space often gets in the way. The good news is that some avocado trees stay naturally small and compact, making them perfect for patios, balconies, and even indoor growing. These are called Condo Avocados.
- They have the same tasty fruit as full-sized trees but take up much less room. You can easily grow them in large pots or containers. They begin to fruit when it's just 2-3 feet tall and remain under 10-12 feet, even after 10 years of growth.
- The most popular condo avocados are:
🟢 Wurtz (Little Cado): A true dwarf avocado tree that stays small and grows well in containers. It can even produce fruit indoors near a sunny window.
- 🟢 Fuerte: A semi-dwarf variety that’s easy to manage and does well in pots or small yards.
- 🟢 Joey: Not a true dwarf, but naturally compact. With a bit of pruning, it can stay small and fit nicely in limited spaces.
Condo avocados are a great way to enjoy homegrown avocados even if you don’t have a big yard. Just give them sun, good soil, and regular care - and you’ll have fresh avocados right on your porch!
✔️ Check outAvocado Variety Guide interactive chart. Sort them by flower type A or B, tree habit, fruit shape and quality, cold hardiness, origin, season and more!
🛒 Shop Avocado varieties
📖 Our Book: Avocado Variety Guide, Snack or Guacamole?
- ·
📚Learn more:
- ▫️Five most popular Avocado cultivars
- ▫️More posts on #Avocado
#Food_Forest #Avocado
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