Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Ponderosa lemon

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Kingdom
  
Plantae

Family
  
Species
  
C. limon × C. medica

Rank
  
Hybrid

Order
  
Genus
  
Higher classification
  
Citrus

Ponderosa lemon Ponderosa Lemons Information Recipes and Facts

Scientific name
  
Citrus limon × Citrus medica

Similar
  
Citrus, Orangequat, Limequat, Shangjuan, Imperial lemon

Growing the ponderosa lemon tree and a look at the fruit it produces


The ponderosa lemon (Citrus limon × medica) is a citrus hybrid of a lemon and a citron. It is not the same as the 'Yuma Ponderosa' lemon pomello hybrid, that is used as citrus rootstock.

Contents

Ponderosa lemon Buy Ponderosa Lemon Citrus limon 39Ponderosa39 4quot Pot 1 Year Old

Giant ponderosa lemon tree


Description

Ponderosa lemon PONDEROSA LEMON TREE Just Fruits and Exotics

Ponderosa lemon trees are slow growing but reach a height of 12 to 24 feet at maturity. The leaves are long, evergreen, glossy, and citron-like, being ovate elliptic in shape and lemon scented. They have medium thick branches, that have many spines. New growth is purple tinged, as are the flowers. Ponderosa lemon also has larger than average citrus flowers, and bears fruit throughout the year. When grown as an ornamental, pruning is required to control the shape, and may be trained as a bush or tree.

Ponderosa lemon is less cold hardy than a true lemon. It bears medium to large fruit that have a thick and bumpy rind. The fruits are seedy, and while they look similar to a citron, they taste like a lemon.

Origin

Ponderosa lemon d3t0t2nqwmr1c9cloudfrontnetphotos256Ponderosa

The ponderosa lemon originated in roughly 1887, and is believed to come from a chance seedling grown in Hagerstown, Maryland. It was later named and introduced to the nursery trade in 1900.

Uses

Ponderosa lemon Florida Ponderosa Lemons LimoncelloQuest

Ponderosa lemon is not widely grown commercially, but it is commonly grown as an ornamental plant. In areas where the winter's cold may damage the plant, they are grown in containers. In such cases they are usually grafted to dwarf rootstocks to help maintain a smaller, more manageable size. The impressive sized fruits may be left on the tree for many months after they've ripened without a drop in the fruits' quality. In addition, like citron, Ponderosa lemon trees can flower and bear fruit at the same time, further adding to the visual appeal.

Ponderosa lemon ponderosa

While the fruit are larger than that of a normal lemon, they have the same flavor and acidity. As such, the fruit can be used in place of true lemons. There is enough juice for several lemon pies in just one large Ponderosa lemon, and they can replace lemons measure for measure in recipes.

References

Ponderosa lemon Wikipedia