Difference between revisions of "Bitter Orange"

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'''Seville Orange Treese'''
'''Seville Orange Treese'''
*Source:http://homeguides.sfgate.com/seville-orange-trees-66414.html
*Source:http://homeguides.sfgate.com/seville-orange-trees-66414.html
:By Aaron Ismail (bateeilee, Aceh Forex Business)
:By Cathryn Chaney


If you were to visit the city of Seville, Spain you would find the streets lined with thousands of evergreen citrus trees. Named after the city because they have been grown there as an ornamental since the end of the 12th century, Seville orange (Citrus aurantium) is also called bitter orange or sour orange. In contrast to its relative sweet orange (Citrus sinensis), Seville orange fruits have a bitter peel and sour pulp and are not eaten as fresh fruit. The trees are widely used as an ornamental and as rootstock for edible citrus, but the fruits also have many uses.
If you were to visit the city of Seville, Spain you would find the streets lined with thousands of evergreen citrus trees. Named after the city because they have been grown there as an ornamental since the end of the 12th century, Seville orange (Citrus aurantium) is also called bitter orange or sour orange. In contrast to its relative sweet orange (Citrus sinensis), Seville orange fruits have a bitter peel and sour pulp and are not eaten as fresh fruit. The trees are widely used as an ornamental and as rootstock for edible citrus, but the fruits also have many uses.
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