Last year I harvested 87lbs of papaya. Unfortunately, about 70 lbs of that was green papaya.
Though green papaya popular in Asian cooking and in parts of Latin America – and there are some good green papaya recipes out there – I think green papaya is just an alright vegetable… whereas ripe papaya is a marvelous fruit.
Interestingly, there are dwarf types of papaya that will make lots of fruit even though they’re shorter than I am. If I could nail some down, I’d grow those. Thus far I’ve been limited in frost protection because my trees grow to such silly heights.
I think you could dig a 6′ deep pit, enrich the bottom with manure or compost, then plant dwarf papaya in there and put plastic over the top for the winter. Local, North Florida papaya could be a hit at the local farmer’s market. Unlike our friends further south, we’re not plagued by horrible papaya-destroying flies.
I love this fruit but it’s been a lot of work to get ripe ones. I must design a better way or I’ll be stuck eating green papaya every fall…
5 comments
We pick ours green in South Texas, and wrap the papayas in newspaper. 2-3 weeks later they are ripe. This is how we have been able to enjoy papaya before they are officially ripe on the tree.
Great tip – thank you!
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Have you encountered the babaco? It's no papaya proper, but it does ripen in cold temperate climates ftw.
Anybody have seeds for these
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