释义 |
Definition of stone fruit in English: stone fruitnoun A fruit with flesh or pulp enclosing a stone, such as a peach, plum, or cherry. Example sentencesExamples - A corner of my father's almond orchard in California's Central Valley has always been reserved for fruit trees, so every summer we were overwhelmed with stone fruit.
- But you could just as well drop a few cardamom pods into a syrup for poaching the stone fruit that will be coming on stream soon or even store it up as a flavour for Christmas cakes and puddings.
- Growers are evaluating the new sprayer for use on grapes, blueberries, and stone fruits.
- In August you'll find an abundance of peaches and other stone fruit, early apples, and vegetables.
- It works very well with chocolate (both dark and best-quality white) or with berries and stone fruit.
- Pests like plum curculio and brown rot are relentless when it comes to stone fruits like plums and peaches.
- These are the last few days that we have to enjoy British and European stone fruits before they disappear for another year.
- This great white wine - with orchard-fresh flavors of stone fruit, citrus, apples, and minerals - is made in many styles, from bone dry to very sweet.
- The apricot gets its name from the Latin word praecox, meaning precocious, for its habit of ripening early compared with other stone fruits.
- A mature Pinot will take on complex savoury aromas and flavours of cherries and red stone fruit, with a silky texture.
- Sweet sabayon is often used to accompany fresh berries or stone fruit.
- Europe is an important market for Australian horticultural exports with Pink Lady apples, onions, table grapes and stone fruit the leading items.
- The system ripens stone fruit in around 12 to 48 hours.
- Although we are almost at the end of the local strawberry season, and raspberries are also on their way out, stone fruits and currants are definitely in.
- Growers of stone fruit, bananas and lychees suffer most.
- The peach twig borer, Anarsia lineatella, is another key pest damaging shoots and fruits of almonds and stone fruits.
- It goes perfectly with summer's stone fruits, either fresh, gently poached or equally gently oven-roasted.
- You could also make it with apples, pears, or even stone fruit such as plums or apricots.
- However, there is a price to pay for living in a horticultural paradise, and for us that means not being able to grow stone fruit successfully.
- John Harris swears by calcified seaweed for encouraging stone fruit such as plums.
Definition of stone fruit in US English: stone fruitnounˈstōn ˌfro͞ot A fruit with flesh or pulp enclosing a stone, such as a peach, plum, or cherry. Example sentencesExamples - John Harris swears by calcified seaweed for encouraging stone fruit such as plums.
- This great white wine - with orchard-fresh flavors of stone fruit, citrus, apples, and minerals - is made in many styles, from bone dry to very sweet.
- It works very well with chocolate (both dark and best-quality white) or with berries and stone fruit.
- Although we are almost at the end of the local strawberry season, and raspberries are also on their way out, stone fruits and currants are definitely in.
- The system ripens stone fruit in around 12 to 48 hours.
- The peach twig borer, Anarsia lineatella, is another key pest damaging shoots and fruits of almonds and stone fruits.
- Sweet sabayon is often used to accompany fresh berries or stone fruit.
- It goes perfectly with summer's stone fruits, either fresh, gently poached or equally gently oven-roasted.
- But you could just as well drop a few cardamom pods into a syrup for poaching the stone fruit that will be coming on stream soon or even store it up as a flavour for Christmas cakes and puddings.
- These are the last few days that we have to enjoy British and European stone fruits before they disappear for another year.
- In August you'll find an abundance of peaches and other stone fruit, early apples, and vegetables.
- A corner of my father's almond orchard in California's Central Valley has always been reserved for fruit trees, so every summer we were overwhelmed with stone fruit.
- Europe is an important market for Australian horticultural exports with Pink Lady apples, onions, table grapes and stone fruit the leading items.
- Pests like plum curculio and brown rot are relentless when it comes to stone fruits like plums and peaches.
- Growers of stone fruit, bananas and lychees suffer most.
- However, there is a price to pay for living in a horticultural paradise, and for us that means not being able to grow stone fruit successfully.
- You could also make it with apples, pears, or even stone fruit such as plums or apricots.
- A mature Pinot will take on complex savoury aromas and flavours of cherries and red stone fruit, with a silky texture.
- Growers are evaluating the new sprayer for use on grapes, blueberries, and stone fruits.
- The apricot gets its name from the Latin word praecox, meaning precocious, for its habit of ripening early compared with other stone fruits.
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