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Date: | Thu, 3 Dec 1998 06:14:04 -0800 |
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[Sorry for new title - lost original post that I was replying to.]
Rex Harrill <[log in to unmask]>:
>When you were living in Florida didn't they tell you that the citrus
>*acid* drop is measured by titration instead of a refractometer? And
>didn't they tell you that the picking started when the inspectors
>figured the *acid* had dropped low enough that a piece or two wouldn't
>permanently disable the stomach of unwary northerners. Sadly, the
>backyard and organic growers, then and now, seem to take their cues from
>the commercial interests. Actually, they were a little worse off. They
>generally didn't want to spend the $100 or so for a titration kit.
>
>Are you still resisting walking over to one of the science labs and
>borrowing a refractometer? If you did, you'd become a believer---quick.
Tom:
You continue with assumptions - the assumption that I ate unripe fruit.
In reality, I was quite savvy to the acidity issue. We did not pick or
eat fruit until weeks after the commercial folks did. They picked navel
oranges in early October - we waited until December to pick them.
Rex Harrill <[log in to unmask]>:
>BTW, is that Berry good piece you posted open for comment? Or, is it
>forbidden fruit? :)
Tom:
The article "Berry Time" by Steve Howe - I did not post it as I don't
have permisssion to do so. My article, of course, is open for comment.
However, note the limit of 5 posts/day on this list - this is #4 for me
today, so I get just one more post today. Folks can post but I might not
reply until tomorrow, due to the posting limit.
Tom Billings
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