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This summer I was eating a strange type of fruit in Ethiopia and I'm still curious to know what it actually was.

  • The taste is similar to citrus fruits (little bit acid like a lemon and bitter like a grapefruit or eating the peel of a lime). It's a local citrus.
  • Unlike citrus fruits, it is very dry to eat and has a very dry, melon texture
  • It was big, between 15 and 25 cm large and its shape was somehow similar to that of a long papaya.
  • It's color was yellow(-green) outside and white inside
  • It had a thick and rough, orange-like peel
  • Local people called it TURUNGU
  • I don't remember well the tree it was growing on but anyway it was not something like a palm or papaya tree, but a 'normal' branched tree with medium sized leaves

Unfortunately I didn't take any pictures of it.

Sironsse
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    If you don't know already, there is a Stack Exchange site dedicated to cooking, [cooking.se]. I mentioned this question in their [chat room](http://chat.stackexchange.com/transcript/message/8476914#8476914) and there was some agreement that it might be Baobab, as @GradyPlayer [suggested](http://gardening.stackexchange.com/questions/5883/what-was-this-large-yellow-green-fruit-i-ate-in-ethiopia#comment7271_5885). – Niall C. Mar 12 '13 at 15:01
  • Thanks Niall, As you can see below, It looks a lot like a baobab from the outside, but the inside is strange. It makes me doubting. Respect to the orange-like peel. I mean that the structure is similar, the bumpy, shiny surface, which you can squeeze together, though very limited (even less for this fruit as it is bigger and more resistant, but the peel can) – Sironsse Mar 12 '13 at 21:45
  • Here they speak about the Turungu as a local fruit http://www.simonharrisonltd.com/about-us/charity/ – Sironsse Mar 12 '13 at 22:48
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    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about cooking/eating – ashes999 Aug 17 '13 at 18:08
  • @Silke If you are certain you have identified the fruit that you ate, please post it as an answer and accept that answer. – Niall C. Sep 16 '13 at 20:17
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    This question appears to be off-topic because it is about identifying a food that was eaten. – TeresaMcgH Jul 01 '14 at 15:07

1 Answers1

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I believe that what you're describing is a type of citrus medica commonly known under many names such as Citron, Etrog, Esrog, Turanj, Bara Nimbu, e.t.c. and I'd guess they also come in all kinds of shapes and sizes. I've seen really odd octopus-like looking fingered etrog ones with their bottom half split into many arms or fingers, but most would look like enormous lemon, some with rougher bumpy skin and some smoother. Here's a photograph comparing one of them to a few more common lemon varieties:

   citrus medica

   Citrus medica, Citron, Etrog, or Esrog. Photograph source: Geetha's Kitchen (inc. description and more photographs of the fruit)

It is the fruit that satisfies all the criteria you've listed (which also describes it pretty good, that's why I immediately thought of it). Borrowing from your text, I'll add a few observations in parentheses to this freeform quote:

The taste is similar to citrus fruits, it's a local citrus [indeed, there are many different local varieties], unlike citrus fruits, it is very dry to eat and has a very dry, melon texture [its white inner skin part does, which is a large part of the fruit], it is big between 15 and 25 cm [can grow even bigger], its shape was somehow similar to that of a long papaya. Its color was yellow-green outside and white inside, it had a thick and rough, orange-like peel, local people called it Turungu [perhaps, and Turunj sounds similar too, which is definitely one of its names], the tree it was growing on was a normal branched tree with medium sized leaves.

There is a Wikipedia page further describing this citrus medica fruit and if you check image results on Google you can also appreciate what I meant that they can grow in rather odd shapes, vary in size and the tree they grow on does look normal and branched out similar to other citrus trees:

     etrog tree

     Smaller etrog or citrus medica tree (Source: Celebrating Tu B’Shvat – The “New Year for Trees”)

TildalWave
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