
Mid-March marks the start of summer as well as the season for star apples or kaymito. This fruit can be found in most warm, tropical climates; in the Philippines, you can find star apples growing around the southern Tagalog region and being sold by roadside vendors for 25 pesos a kilo (around 3 or 4 star apples). You’ll know a star apple is ripe when its skin has a dark purple, eggplant-like hue; it turns green when the fruit softens and becomes overripe. Be careful not to eat a star apple while it’s still hilaw; it will taste strange and have the weird consistency of latex.






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