Garden Blog - Top Tropicals

Date: 25 Oct 2025

Straight from the Amazon: the most beautiful ginger everyone asks about at our farm

Variegated Spiral Ginger - Costus arabicus (amazonicus)

⭐️ Straight from the Amazon: the most beautiful ginger everyone asks about at our farm

  • 🌀 Variegated Spiral Ginger - Costus arabicus (amazonicus) is not your average ginger. Unlike the common gingers with plain green leaves and short flower spikes, this one is a real standout. Its tall spiral stems are striped with bold white variegation, creating a dramatic swirl of green and cream even before it blooms.
  • 🌀 And when it does bloom - the flowers are pure white with soft yellow centers, like porcelain sculptures nestled among the leaves. It's a tropical showpiece that turns heads wherever it grows.
  • 🌀 Originally from South America and now loved in Hawaii and Florida, this ginger thrives in moist, rich soil and loves plenty of water. It handles both sun and shade, but really shines in a bright, filtered light spot.
  • 🌀 We have one growing right by our farm office, and everyone who walks by stops, stares, and says the same thing: "I want that plant!"
Now you can have it too - straight from the Amazon forest to your garden!

🛒 Get your own Amazon Ginger

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#Container_Garden #Shade_Garden

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Date: 3 Nov 2025

Cashews: more magnesium than almonds!

Cashew Nuts - Anacardium occidentale

Cashew Nuts - Anacardium occidentale

Cashews: more magnesium than almonds!

  • 🌰 Cashews might be the real nutty winner when it comes to magnesium. One ounce provides about 83 mg, or roughly 20% of your daily need, slightly topping almonds at 76 mg, according to Verywell Health.
  • 🌰 Magnesium plays a key role in your body’s daily operations - it helps your heart, muscles, and bones function properly, keeps blood pressure steady, and supports your energy and metabolism. Yet many people still fall short of getting enough.
  • 🌰 Along with magnesium, cashews are packed with protein, healthy fats, copper, zinc, and iron - all nutrients your body depends on.


🏆 More magnesium-rich fruit:



Avocado


Avocados are famous for their healthy fats, but they’re also surprisingly high in magnesium - about 58 mg per medium fruit. That’s one of the highest amounts among fruits. Their creamy texture and fiber content make them especially gentle on the stomach, helping digestion and easing constipation. Regularly adding avocado to meals can support gut health, muscle function, and overall mineral balance in a naturally delicious way.

🍍 Pineapple


Best known for its enzyme bromelain, pineapple also provides a helpful 20 mg of magnesium per cup. While not the top source, it offers a rare combination of fiber, enzymes, and minerals that benefit the digestive system. Bromelain helps reduce inflammation in the gut, and magnesium keeps digestive muscles relaxed. Together, they make pineapple a light, refreshing choice for better digestion and a balanced system.

✅ How to get more magnesium:

  • • Eat a mix of magnesium-rich foods every day - your body only absorbs about half of what you consume.
  • • Try pairing magnesium-rich sources. Add Cashews, Avocados, Bananas, Pineapple, or Spinach to your meals and snacks.
  • • Remember, caffeine, age, and certain medications can reduce absorption, so balance your diet and check with your doctor if needed.
  • • A handful of cashews can go a long way - for your heart, your energy, and your bones.


🛒 Explore your future food forest: fruit and edibles

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Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover

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Date: 11 Nov 2025

Fruits with the most vitamin E, according to dietitians

Fruits with the most vitamin E

Fruits with the most vitamin E

🥭 Fruits with the most vitamin E, according to dietitians

  • 🔛 Vitamin E works as an antioxidant that helps fight inflammation throughout the body. While nuts and seeds top the charts, some fruits quietly add their share to your daily needs - especially when eaten with a bit of healthy fat. According to New York City Nutrition, vitamin E anti-inflammatory action supports heart, brain, and skin health.
  • 🔛 Vitamin E is a fat-soluble vitamin that acts as an antioxidant, meaning it fights inflammation in the body. Because of this anti-inflammatory role, vitamin E is beneficial for immune health, heart health, eye health, brain health, and skin health.
  • 🔛 Adults need about 15 milligrams a day, according to the National Institutes of Health. Deficiency is rare, but it’s smart to get vitamin E from a variety of foods. Fruits alone don’t provide large amounts, but they can complement vitamin-E-rich foods like almonds or sunflower seeds.
  • 🔛 Since vitamin E needs fat for absorption, pair fruit with something creamy or crunchy - like yogurt, olive oil, nuts, or seeds - for best results.
  • 🔛 Here are some fruits that naturally offer vitamin E:

  • 🍊 Sapote 1 cup = 3.7 mg vitamin E. A tropical favorite with rich orange flesh and a flavor somewhere between pumpkin pie and sweet potato, with hints of honey and almond, Sapote is great fresh, blended in shakes, or scooped over ice cream. It also packs calcium, iron, potassium, and vitamins A and C.
  • Blackberries 1 cup = 1.7 mg vitamin E. Deep color, bold flavor, and plenty of antioxidants, Blackberries are high in fiber and low in calories. Dietitian Keri Glassman calls them her top fruit for fighting inflammation.
  • 🥭 Mango 1 cup = 1.5 mg vitamin E. The “king of fruits” brings more than tropical sweetness, Mango supports digestion, helps you feel full longer, and delivers both vitamin A and E in one juicy package.
  • 🍉 Guava 1 cup = 1.2 mg vitamin E. This fragrant fruit has a flavor that lands between strawberry and pear, Guava is also one of the highest-fiber fruits and surprisingly rich in protein for a fruit.
  • 🍑 Persimmon 1 fruit = 1.2 mg vitamin E. An autumn favorite that looks like an orange tomato but tastes sweet and mellow, Persimmons are rich in vitamins A and C and make a colorful, fiber-filled snack or dessert.
  • Avocado 1 fruit = 0.9 mg vitamin E. Creamy, mild, and versatile, Avocado’s healthy fats help your body absorb vitamin E while protecting heart health. Try it on toast, in salads, or as a smooth butter substitute in baking.

🛒 Plant more remedies in your food forest

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Learn more:
#Food_Forest #Remedies #Discover

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Date: 1 Dec 2025

What happens when you eat it every day: a bowl of Papaya for breakfast

bowl of Papaya for breakfast

bowl of Papaya for breakfast

🍲 What happens when you eat it every day: a bowl of Papaya for breakfast

  • 🍊 If you grow your own papayas or just enjoy picking one from your food forest in the morning, a small bowl (about 140-150 g) can quietly transform your day - and your long-term health. This tropical fruit is naturally low in calories, high in fiber, and loaded with vitamins A and C, making it a perfect morning starter for metabolism, digestion, and immunity.
  • 🍊 Why papaya works so well in the morning



    Papaya is famous for its natural enzyme, papain. It kick-starts digestion, eases bloating, helps break down proteins, and supports regular bowel movements. Ayurveda has praised ripe papaya for centuries as a cooling, Pitta- and Kapha-balancing fruit that clears toxins and improves gut function. Modern nutrition agrees: a fiber-rich, enzyme-rich fruit first thing in the day steadies appetite and helps prevent mid-morning cravings.
  • 🍊 Daily benefits at a glance


  • Weight support: Low calorie, high fiber, and keeps you full longer.
  • Heart and blood pressure: Rich in potassium, vitamins, and antioxidants that support healthy cholesterol, smooth blood flow, and normal blood pressure.
  • Liver support: Antioxidants, choline, and beta-carotene help reduce inflammation, regulate fats, and protect liver cells from oxidative stress.
  • Skin health: Papain and vitamin C help remove damaged cells, improve collagen formation, and support a clearer, smoother complexion.
  • Immunity: One medium papaya gives more than double the daily vitamin C requirement and helps stimulate white blood cells while protecting them from oxidative stress.
  • Constipation relief: Papaya’s fiber and enzymes gently improve regularity and support a clean, efficient gut.


🍊 What research shows



According to the National Library of Medicine, papaya pulp and seeds contain vitamins A, C, and E; B vitamins; potassium; magnesium; carotenoids; glucosinolates; and unique phenolic compounds. Together, these show antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, hypoglycemic, and hypolipidemic actions. Studies link papaya extracts to reduced cholesterol and triglycerides, improved blood pressure regulation (ACE-inhibitory effects), and protection against oxidative stress.

Papaya seeds also demonstrate promising anti-cancer potential, including activity against colon, prostate, and liver cancer cells. Lycopene and other carotenoids further reduce oxidative damage linked to chronic diseases.

🍊 For home growers



A ripe papaya from your own garden isn’t just a sweet breakfast bowl. It’s a daily boost for digestion, immunity, skin, heart, and metabolic health. Growing papaya means you have a year-round supply of one of nature’s most complete morning foods - fresh, clean, and packed with bioactive compounds your body immediately puts to use.

✍️ Scientific reference


National Library of Medicine:

🛒 Grow your own medicine - Papaya

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Plant Facts

Carica papaya
Papaya
USDA Zone: 9-11
Small tree 10-20 ftFull sunDry conditionsModerate waterYellow, orange flowersWhite, off-white flowersEdible 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
  • 🟡more posts about #Papaya
  • 🟡Papaya tree - Carica papaya - in Plant Encyclopedia
  • 🟡Which fruit helps you lose weight faster: Mango or Papaya?
  • 🟡Ten best fruit trees to grow in Florida and Southern landscapes. Papaya Tree.
  • 🟡Carefree Garden: How Easy Is It to Grow a Papaya Tree?
  • 🟡The truth about Papaya
  • 🟡Top 10 fruit you'll ever need for your health benefits. Papaya.

    📱 Watch YouTube short videos:


    #Food_Forest #Papaya #Remedies #Discover

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  • Date: 8 Dec 2025

    Avocado miso toast-up: quick-n-fun exotic recipes

    Avocado miso toast

    Avocado miso toast

    Avocado fruit

    Avocado fruit

    🍴 Avocado Miso Toast-Up

    A fast, savory avocado toast with a subtle umami kick. Creamy ripe avocado is mashed with a small touch of miso, spread on warm toast, and finished with cracked black pepper. Simple, unexpected, and deeply satisfying.

    Ingredients

    • 1 ripe avocado
    • 1/4 teaspoon white or light miso paste
    • 2 slices bread, toasted
    • Freshly crushed black pepper, to taste

    Instructions

    1. Scoop the avocado flesh into a bowl.
    2. Add miso and mash until mostly smooth.
    3. Spread evenly on warm toast.
    4. Finish with crushed black pepper and serve immediately.


    🛒 Plant several varieties and always have Avocado in season

    📚 Learn more:

    Plant Facts

    Persea americana, Persea gratissima
    Avocado, Alligator Pear, Aguacate, Abacate
    USDA Zone: 9-11
    Large tree taller than 20 ftSmall tree 10-20 ftFull sunRegular waterEdible plantSubtropical plant. Mature plant cold hardy at least to 30s F for a short time
  • · Avocado Variety Guide
  • · Posts about #Avocado
  • · Avocado tree (Persea americana) in Plant Encyclopedia

  • #Food_Forest #Recipes #Avocado

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