From a “Coffea arabica” plant in the greenhouse.
From the Missouri Botanical Garden,
http://www.missouribotanicalgarden.org/PlantFinder/PlantFinderDetails.aspx?kempercode=b632 » “Arabian coffee is an upright tropical evergreen shrub or small tree that grows to 10-15' tall. Although native to Ethiopia, Arabian coffee has been cultivated in Arabia for over 1000 years. It is now commercially grown in subtropical and tropical areas throughout the world. In coffee plantations, plants are kept trimmed to 6' tall for ease of harvest and best production. Indoor container plants typically grow to about 4-6' tall. Plants feature
(a) glabrous, glossy, elliptical, dark green leaves with prominent veins and wavy margins,
(b) fragrant (resembles the aroma of jasmine), star-shaped, white flowers that bloom in axillary clusters of 2-9,
(c) green two-seeded fruits (berries) that gradually mature to yellow, light red and finally deep red and
(d) fissured bark on older branches.
Berries are edible with a pulpy grape-like texture, but it is the seeds (coffee beans) that are coveted. Berries are picked by hand when ripe and depulped, with the extracted seeds/beans then dried in the sun before roasting. Coffee beans contain caffeine.”
So this fruit in my palm will yield two coffee beans. Two.
Species page at PhytoImages,
http://phytoimages.siu.edu/taxpage/0/0/79/binomial/Coffea%20arabica.html
Photo taken at SIUC Plant Biology Greenhouse,
http://www.plantbiology.siu.edu/facilities/plant-biology-facilities/greenhouse/index.php
1 year ago (“Guess the estimate!”):
http://365project.org/rhoing/365/2014-01-20
2 years ago (“Sunset at the lake [SOOC]”):
http://365project.org/rhoing/365/2013-01-20
3 years ago (“Heirloom”):
http://365project.org/rhoing/365/2012-01-20
4 years ago (“Qu’est-ce que c’est?”):
http://365project.org/rhoing/365/2011-01-20
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