Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 19 Feb 2026

10 ways to enjoy Wild Medlar - Spanish Tamarind

Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar)

Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar)

🍊 10 ways to enjoy Wild Medlar - Spanish Tamarind



Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar) from Africa to your backyard: the fruit, the medicine, the tradition.

Spanish Tamarind may look like a small, unassuming fruit - but don’t let it fool you. In its native Africa, this tree is a food staple, a home remedy, and a cultural favorite, all wrapped into one. And now, it’s ready to bring that same magic into your garden and kitchen. People have used this fruit for generations - and how you can too.

🍊 1. Eat it fresh, off the tree


When ripe, the fruit turns golden brown and softens slightly. Its flavor is sweet-tart, almost like a tangy apple or tamarind with a hint of citrus. Just peel and eat!

🍬 2. Dry it for snacks


In many African regions, the fruit is sun-dried and enjoyed like natural fruit leather. It keeps well, travels well, and makes a great healthy snack.

🍵 3. Brew it into a fruit tea


Dried fruit can be steeped into a tart, refreshing tea that’s packed with vitamin C and antioxidants. Add honey or ginger for a soothing drink.

🍷 4. Ferment it into traditional beer or wine


In some local cultures, the fruit is fermented into a mild alcoholic drink, similar to fruit wine or beer. This is one of the tree’s oldest known traditional uses.

🍧 5. Make jams and preserves


Boil the pulp with sugar and lemon juice to make tangy medlar jam. Spread it on toast, stir into yogurt, or use it in baking.

6. Add to porridge or smoothies


Crushed or juiced medlar fruit is added to traditional maize porridge for a nutrient boost. You can do the same with oatmeal or smoothies.

7. Try traditional fruit pudding


A simple medlar mash with a little sweetener makes a rich, apple-like pudding with hints of spice. Great as a chilled dessert.

🌿 8. Use the leaves and bark medicinally


In folk medicine, leaves are brewed into a tea for treating fever, colds, and stomach aches. Bark is used for chest congestion and coughs. Roots are sometimes used for even stronger remedies like malaria treatment.

9. Clean your teeth the traditional way


Believe it or not, people use medlar leaves to clean their teeth! The leaves are antimicrobial and have a slight astringent taste that leaves your mouth feeling fresh.

🎨 10. Dye fabric naturally
Crush the bark or boil the leaves to create natural dyes in yellow, green, and even purple tones. This use is still practiced in rural areas of southern Africa.

✍️ Why this tree belongs in your life


Wild Medlar is more than just a fruit. It’s a versatile, resilient, and deeply cultural plant that connects generations. It’s food, it’s healing, it’s art—and now it can be part of your garden story.
Grow it for the fruit, the medicine, the tradition… or just for the joy of growing something wild and wonderful.

🛒 Plant Spanish Tamarind and enjoy exotic fruit benefits

📚 Learn more:

Plant Facts

Vangueria infausta
Wild Medlar, Spanish Tamarind
USDA Zone: 9-11
Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterEdible plantDeciduous plantEthnomedical plant.
Plants marked as ethnomedical and/or described as medicinal, are not offered as medicine but rather as ornamentals or plant collectibles.
Ethnomedical statements / products have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. We urge all customers to consult a physician before using any supplements, herbals or medicines advertised here or elsewhere.Subtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
  • Vangueria infausta - Spanish Tamarind in Plant Encyclopedia
  • 7 steps for a care-free Spanish Tamarind - the easiest rare fruit to grow
  • The wild fruit with a secret: health benefits of rare Spanish Tamarind - the exotic fruit you've never heard of

  • #Food_Forest #Remedies #Recipes #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 21 Feb 2026

    The best time to plant a fruit tree was 20 years ago - here is why you need to plant it now

    Litchi chinensis - Smiles under the Lychee tree

    Litchi chinensis - Smiles under the Lychee tree

    🍑 The best time to plant a fruit tree was 20 years ago - here is why you need to plant it now



    They say the best time to plant a fruit tree was 20 years ago.
    The second best time is today.

    A fruit tree is not a seasonal purchase. It is not a decoration. It is a decision that stretches far beyond you.

    When you plant a mango, an avocado, a loquat, a lychee tree - you are not just planting for this summer. You are planting for children who will climb that tree. For neighbors who will ask for a basket of fruit. For someone who may live in your house long after you are gone.

    Fruit trees are quiet investments in the future.
    Unlike annual crops that come and go, a tree deepens its roots every year. Many fruit trees - especially mangoes - can live for decades, even a century. They outlive trends, owners, renovations, even mortgages. They stand there, steady, producing.

    Even if you sell the house, the tree remains.
    The next family will walk into the yard and discover fruit hanging overhead. Imagine buying a home and realizing someone before you planted abundance!

    That is a gift.

    In many parts of the world, mango trees are called generational crops. One farmer plants them. His children harvest them. His grandchildren sell the fruit. A single decision continues to feed and support a family long after the planter is gone.
    There is something deeply grounding about that.

    We live in a fast world. Quick returns. Quick moves. Quick upgrades.
    A fruit tree moves at a different pace. It asks for patience. It rewards consistency. It teaches you to think long term.

    Planting a fruit tree says:
    I believe in tomorrow.
    I believe this land will matter.
    I believe someone will stand here after me.

    And even if you never taste the fullest harvest, someone will.
    Passing fruit trees through generations is more than horticulture - it is legacy. It is continuity. It is resilience. It is saying that this space, this soil, this home will keep giving.

    So plant it now.
    Plant it for your children.
    Plant it for the next homeowner.
    Plant it for shade you may never sit under.
    Plant it for fruit you may never pick.
    Because one day, someone will walk into that yard, look up, and thank the person who thought ahead.
    Let that person be you.

    🛒 Explore fruit trees for your orchard
    • 👉 Tropical Fruit favorites:



    🥭 Mango
    Avocado
    🍒 Cherry
    🍊 Loquat
    🍈 Jackfruit
    🍑 Peach tree
    🍉 Guava
    🍏 Sugar apple
    🍇 Mulberry
    🍐 Sapodilla

    #Food_Forest #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 2 Mar 2026

    Beyond fruit: how this African tree supports wildlife and garden health

    Vangueria infausta - Spanish Tamarind

    Vangueria infausta - Spanish Tamarind

    Beyond fruit: how this African tree supports wildlife and garden health: Wild Medlar in the ecological food forest 🍊

    Vangueria infausta (Spanish Tamarind, Wild Medlar) might win your heart for its sweet-tart fruit and folk medicine magic - but did you know it’s also a quiet hero in the ecosystem? Whether you’re planting a full-blown food forest or just a mixed backyard garden, Vangueria infausta brings more than fruit to the table. It brings balance, beauty, and biodiversity.

    🐝 Pollinator power


    When in bloom, this tree produces nectar-rich flowers that attract bees, butterflies, and other pollinators. These beneficial insects don’t just help the Wild Medlar fruit - they boost productivity in your entire garden.
    If you grow mangos, citrus, guava, or veggies nearby, Spanish Tamarind helps keep the pollinator traffic moving.

    🐦 Bird magnet


    Birds are big fans of this tree. They nest in its dense branching, snack on overripe fruit, and help spread seeds. In return, they’ll help keep down pests like caterpillars and beetles.
    Even in a small garden, one Wild Medlar can be a micro-habitat for birds, insects, and other helpful wildlife.

    🌱 Soil stabilizer


    With its deep roots and drought-hardy nature, Wild Medlar helps hold soil in place, especially on slopes or rocky patches. It improves drainage and reduces erosion, which makes it a great addition to food forests in challenging spots.

    🍂 Natural mulch & green cleanup


    The tree drops a modest amount of leaf litter, which breaks down into soft, rich mulch. In a diverse planting, that means fewer weeds, better soil structure, and less watering needed.

    🌿 Companion planting & food forest stacking
    • · Works great as a mid-layer tree in multi-tiered systems
    • · Provides light shade for herbs or smaller fruiting plants
    • · Plays well with bananas, papaya, guava, lemongrass, and ground covers
    In zones 9-11, it can live happily in a mixed border or permaculture guild. In colder zones, just keep it potted and move it around as needed - it still offers many of the same benefits.

    🛡 Pest and disease resistant


    One more bonus: Spanish Tamarind is incredibly low-maintenance. It resists most common pests and doesn’t suffer from fungal issues like many tropical fruit trees do. That means fewer chemicals and more harmony in your garden ecosystem.

    ✍️ Ready to plant something that gives back?


    Think you need more than just another fruit tree? More life. More movement. More meaning in your garden?
    Grow Wild Medlar for the fruit - but keep it for everything else it brings. The pollinators. The shade. The quiet medicine. The steady presence that makes your space feel alive.
    If you’re building a food forest - or simply want a tree that earns its place every single season - this one doesn’t just sit there. It contributes.

    🛒 Plant Spanish Tamarind in your Food Forest for a happy wildlife

    📚 Learn more:

    Plant Facts

    Vangueria infausta
    Wild Medlar, Spanish Tamarind
    USDA Zone: 9-11
    Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunModerate waterEdible plantDeciduous plantEthnomedical plant.
Plants marked as ethnomedical and/or described as medicinal, are not offered as medicine but rather as ornamentals or plant collectibles.
Ethnomedical statements / products have not been evaluated by the FDA and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. We urge all customers to consult a physician before using any supplements, herbals or medicines advertised here or elsewhere.Subtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
  • Vangueria infausta - Spanish Tamarind in Plant Encyclopedia
  • 10 ways to enjoy Wild Medlar - Spanish Tamarind
  • 7 steps for a care-free Spanish Tamarind - the easiest rare fruit to grow
  • The wild fruit with a secret: health benefits of rare Spanish Tamarind - the exotic fruit you've never heard of

  • #Food_Forest #Discover

    🟢 Join 👉 TopTropicals

    Date: 23 Nov 2016

    Growing tropical fruit trees in containers in winter

    Q: Please give me your advice. The winter is here. I bought mango tree, jackfruit tree, sugar apple tree and planned them for spring. What can I do to keep them no frost bite? My home in Bonifay FL.

    A: In subtropical areas with occasional hard freeze in winter, we recommend you to keep tropical plants in pots. The plants you purchase are tender to frost. For cold protection, container growing has several advantages:
    1) easy to move into wind-protected and sun-exposed locations as needed: for example, on a different side of the house. In many areas, seasonal prevailing winds have opposite directions in Summer and Winter.
    2) easy to cover with frost cloth, sheets, or blankets in case of immediate cold spells. Container plants' growth is easier to control and trim, and those plants naturally stay more compact.
    3) easy to move indoors, inside garage, or in covered lanai/patio.
    We also recommend to keep these trees in their original pots until Spring, in containers size of the rootball. Step them up in Spring, when plants start active growth of root system. This will help you to avoid root rot due to possible overwatering in Winter. Reduce watering in any case, and keep your plants in bright, wind-protected spot. Do not fertilize until Spring. Protect from cold when night temperature drops below 35-40F.

    Use SUNSHINE plant boosters to provide additional cold tolerance.

    Cold protection is a lengthy subject. You may also use propane heaters during cold nights. Here is some more information on cold protection

    Date: 22 May 2016

    Plant Horoscope. Gemini Zodiac lucky plants: Anthurium and Philodenron

    Gemini - 5/21-6/20. Ruled by the mutable, changeable planet Mercury (also patron of the art of medicine), Gemini is an AIR sign. Plants ruled by Mercury tend to have ferny or highly-divided leaves or stems (like the bronchi of lungs), hairy or fuzzy leaves (related to the cilia in the lungs), or subtle odors.

    Gemini rules the lungs, shoulders, arms, and hands. Its plants help to strengthen the lungs and respiratory system, relax the nervous system, strengthen ears and hearing, the tongue and speaking, the vocal cords, lungs and thyroid, as well as the shoulders, arms, and hands. Gemini has so much going on mentally that they may need a little help to digest all the information they're constantly absorbing. Herbs that have clean, pure flavor not only help physical digestion, but assist spiritual and mental intake as well.

    Gemini Zodiac lucky plants: Ferns, Blechnum, Tree ferns and Cyatheas, Fern Tree, Aralias, Jackfruit and Breadfruit, Paulownia, Anthurium, Philodendron, Philadelphus, Clerodendrums, Anise, Lavender, Myrtle, Nut trees, Macadamia, Ficus, Piggyback plant - Tolmiea menziesii, Aloe vera, Fig, Honeysuckle, Azalea, Mint Tree Satureja, Vitex, Ironwood, Mulberry, Osmoxylon, Acalypha, Allamanda, Aphelandra, Iboza, Ruda, Kiwi, Caesalpinia, Cyphomandra, Monstera, Kalanchoe, Magnolia, Oregano, Ocimum, Naranjilla, Zamia, Delionix, Acacias, Calliandra, Patchoili, Palms, Geranium, Grevillea, Eucalyptus.

    For other signs information, see full Plant Horoscope