Outside the greenhouses at Nishida Citrus and Fruit Garden in Kumamoto
prefecture, peach trees are in full bloom and a cool breeze carries the scent
of the blossoms to the road. But inside the greenhouses, a more vibrant scent
radiates from the ripening fruit of dekopon trees.
Dekopon, also known as or shiranui, is a
cross between a tangerine-like fruit known as kiyomi and a seedy orange from India known as ponkan.
Bigger than most oranges but smaller than a grapefruit, the dekopon is
immediately identifiable by a distinctive bulge at the stem end. Its name in
fact is derived from the Japanese word for bump, “deko” and “pon” from the
first syllable of ponkan.
At first glance, the fruit might pass for a minneola or some other tangelo, the
popular group of citrus fruits derived by crossing a tangerines with a
grapefruits or pommelos. But none of those fruits has the distinctive aroma of
this fruit, nor the profound sweetness of a dekopon.
Sweetness in fruit juices is measured in brix. Named for A. F. W. Brix, a
nineteenth-century German inventor, who developed the scale, brix is most often
associated with wine growing and wine-making. Each degree on the scale
indicates 1 gram of sugar per 100 grams of juice. The average brix for oranges
sold in the U.S. is just under 12 degrees. Using a high-tec gadget that
measures brix with a light sensor placed on the surface of the fruit, Junichi Nishida carefully measures the brix of each
fruit as its picked and he won’t sell his fruit unless it measures 14% or
higher.
According to an article published in Japan Times in January of 2009, the fruit
got its start in 1972 when scientist first crossed kiyomi and ponkan, but the
fruits were considered less than promising because they didn’t hold well and
the yields were low. But an unidentified grower from Kumamoto prefecture saw
promise in the fruit and started growing it in earnest.
As Nishida lovingly snips a perfectly ripened
specimen from one of his trees and subjects it to the brix test, it’s easy to
imagine that he might have been that anonymous rogue grower who saw what others
failed to see in the potential of this rising star in the citrus constellation.
Nishida has an elfin quality as he moves gingerly over the slippery uneven,
ground between the trees, which is covered in black plastic to retain moisture.
Gesticulating and smiling as he moves, he animatedly explains how his fruits
are coaxed to maturity.
“These trees are about thirty years old,” says Nishida through an interpreter.
“They reach their peak production at about twenty years of age. A single tree
at peak production yields about 320 pounds of fruit.”
All Nishida’s fruit is certified organic and the certification standards
prohibit the use of any fertilizers. “You see how these leaves are yellow,” he
says, pointing out a few leaves that are paler than the vibrant green ones
around them. “This is an indication that the tree needs nutrients; if I were a
conventional grower, I would fertilize the trees. But I have discovered that a tree
that’s struggling produces sweeter fruits.”
“I keep watering to minimum too so that the juices will be more concentrated.”
From June to November the greenhouses are uncovered so that the trees are
exposed to rainfall. If it’s a very dry year, he will give the trees water.
“Usually I don’t have to.” During harvest season, the trees are covered, and in
very cold weather, a heater is turned on the greenhouses. “The cover helps the
orchard retain some heat, but it’s primary function is to protect the fruit
from birds.”
“We select the largest
fruits for the gift boxes,” says Nishida, each one weighs in at about 12
ounces. “But people are asking for smaller variety for home.”
The largest fruits are cradled in padded boxes, ten fruits per box and sold on-line
for about 5,000 yen (roughly 50 dollars, U.S. per box). Through an informal
U-pick arrangement, neighbors are invited to pick their own fruits at a reduced
price. Harvest is in March and shipping continues through April. Other citrus
fruits from his greenhouses are harvested from December through February. The
Nishidas employ four full time workers and two local women work part time
during harvest season, pruning the trees as they harvest.
“I wanted to grow citrus to supplement the peaches and other summer fruits,”
says Nishida. Peaches ripen in summer and citrus fruits ripen in the winter.
Now in addition to his peach orchards he has six greenhouses, three of them
filled with dekopon; he also grows lemons, satsuma mandarins and a small number
of yuzu, the vibrant fruit that gives ponzu sauce its punch. “This year, I’m
adding a few blood oranges.”
Some of the fruit is converted into bottled juices, also sold on line. Unshu
simikon, the familiar satsuma mandarin is the variety from which Nishida makes most
of his bottled juice. The Satsuma juice sells for about fifteen dollars for a
one-liter bottle, while the pure dekopon juice costs fifteen dollars for a
bottle half that size, marketed in elegant paper-wrapped bottles and the juice
is pasteurized and sealed to remain shelf stable for at least ninety days. Both
juices are made from the whole fruit, not just the pulp and they pack a
powerful punch. The bar at the Four Seasons Hotel in Tokyo uses the Nishidas’
juice exclusively for their signature mimosas, cutting the sumptuous juice with
a splash of champagne to make their signature brunch cocktail.
In addition to the juices, Nishida contracts a local company to produce sorbets
and ice creams with his fruit. The peach ice cream is swirled with peach sorbet
and the dokopon sorbet is startlingly vibrant. A chocolate ice cream infused
with essence of dekopon is almost unbelievably flavorful.
Inside the greenhouse, Nishida distributes samples of the frozen confections to
reporters, his wife Noboku spoons samples of lemon curd and orange marmalade
onto small squares of white bread. The preserves are vibrantly colored and
brilliantly flavored. But none of the value added products the Nishidas produce
can outshine the brilliant dekopon in its purest form. Considering the rarity
and quality of this fruit, ten oranges for fifty dollars seems like and
incredible bargain.
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