Sponsored Links

 

Pineapple Facts Home

How To Cut A Pineapple

Pineapple Tree

Growing Pineapple

Pineapple Nutrition

Benefits Of Pineapple

Pineapple Facts - Your Online Source for Information on Pineapples

Make Some Interesting Discoveries from These Pineapple Facts

• One of the most interesting pineapple facts is that ever since the earliest settlements were established in America, a pineapple has been traditionally given as a gift of friendship.

• It takes a long time for a pineapple plant to produce fruit, normally two years.

• The first pineapples were found growing in Brazil and Paraguay.

• Southeast Asia now produces the majority of the world’s pineapples.

• Pineapple facts make it known that the pineapple was originally given the name of “anana,” which means “excellent fruit.”

• In 2004, 31,000 acres of pineapples were grown in Hawaii.

• James Dole is considered the “King of Pineapples.”

• You can grow your own pineapple by planting the top of the pineapple in soil.

• In 1917, Del Monte became the second American to produce pineapples commercially in
Hawaii.

• The most prominent type of pineapple is the Smooth Cayenne.

• Christopher Columbus introduced the pineapple to Europe.

• Pulling leaves from a pineapple is not an indication of ripeness as many people think.

• Del Monte stopped producing pineapples in Hawaii in 2006.

• According to pineapple facts, a man names Henry Ginaca invented the first pineapple peeling and coring machine in 1911. Before this, pineapples were peeled and cored by hand. Ginaca’s machine cored and peeled  35 pineapples a minute.

• Every pineapple plant produces one pineapple each year.

• A pineapple is considered to be a cluster of 100-300 little fruitlets.

• You can’t use pineapple in jello because its bromelain content stops it from jelling.

• A pineapple cannot ripen more after it is picked.

• An unripe pineapple not only tastes awful, it can be poisonous.

• One of the ways you tell if a pineapple is ripe is by smelling it.

• Among pineapple facts is one that indicates Thailand produces more pineapples than any other country in the world.

• The Philippines and Brazil are second and third in pineapple production.

• After Columbus first found pineapples, they started to be used on ships to prevent scurvy.

• The word pineapple was originally given to pine cones, but in 1694, the sole use of the word was given to the pineapple fruit.

• In Hawaii, the word for pineapple is “Hala kahiki.”

• 212,000 tons of pineapple were produced in Hawaii in 2005.

• Pineapples are eaten as fresh fruit, canned, frozen, made in syrups, juices, candied and dried.

• The bromelain in pineapple is used as a meat tenderizer.

• The fruit, peel, and juice of pineapples is said to remove warts.

• The core of the pineapple is edible.

• Any fresh pineapple not eaten right away can be refrigerated for one week.

• It was a rite of passage in the Caribbean for young men to run through the pineapple plantings, and bear the pain from the prickly leaves without revealing it.

• A pineapple can be ripe even if the outside is green.

• Eating pineapple is believed to induce uterine contractions during pregnancy.

• The pineapple pulp left after juicing is used in livestock feed. It is very high in vitamin A.

• Do not buy pineapples that have soft spots or dark spots.

• Pineapples have long been a folk remedy for bladder problems.

• If you eat too many pineapple cores you can get fiber balls in your digestive tract.

• Do not mix dairy products with pineapple until right before serving.


 

 

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Pineapple Facts Home | How To Cut A Pineapple | Pineapple Tree | Growing Pineapple | Site Map | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy