The lemon (Citrus × limon) is a hybrid citrus tree of cultivated origin. The fruit are used primarily for their juice, though the pulp and rind (zest) are also used, primarily in cooking or mixing. Lemon juice is about 5% citric acid, which gives lemons a sour taste and a pH of 2 to 3. This acidity makes lemon juice a cheap, readily available acid for use in educational chemistry experiments.
Description
A lemon tree can grow up to 6 m (20 ft), but they are usually smaller. The branches are thorny, and form an open crown. The leaves are green, shiny and
elliptical-acuminate.
Flowers are white on the outside with a violet streaked interior. On a lemon tree, flowers and ripe fruits can be found at the same time.
There are several varieties of lemon including Eureka, Lisbon and the Meyer lemon, which is thought to be a hybrid.
Cultivation
Lemons grow in tropical and sub-tropical climates and cannot withstand frosts and very cold temperatures. Their favored temperature is between 15–30 °C (60–85 °F). They thrive in fertile soils and ample quantities of sunlight. Propagation is often by
grafting as the stock is vulnerable to
cankers and
dry rot.
Lemons are grown commercially in Spain, Portugal and other Mediterranean countries, Argentina, Brazil and the United States. They can be grown as plants in the garden as well as in containers if they are pruned to keep a small form.
History
The lemon is a cultivated hybrid deriving from wild species such as the
citron and
mandarin. When and where this first occurred is not known. The citron, apparently the fruit described in
Pliny's Natural History (XII, vii.15) as the
malum medicum — the "medicinal fruit" — seems to have been the first citrus fruit known in the Mediterranean world. Depictions of citrus trees appear in Roman mosaics of North Africa, but the first unequivocal description of the lemon, is found in the early tenth-century Arabic treatise on farming by
Qustus al-Rumi. At the end of the twelfth century, Ibn Jami’, personal physician to the great Muslim leader
Saladin, wrote a treatise on the lemon, after which it is mentioned with greater frequency in the Mediterranean. However, it is believed that the first lemons were originally cultivated in the hot, semi-arid
Deccan Plateau in
Central India.
The origin of the name "lemon" is through Persian (لیمو Limu), akin to the Sanskrit nimbuka. They were cultivated in Genoa in the mid-fifteenth century, and appeared in the Azores in 1494. More recent research has identified lemons in the ruins of Pompeii. Lemons were once used by the British Royal navy to combat scurvy, as they provided a large amount of vitamin C.
In food preparation
Both lemons and limes are regularly served as lemonade or limeade, its equivalent, or as a garnish for drinks such as iced tea or a soft drink, with a slice either inside or on the rim of the glass. Only lemons, however, are used in the Italian liqueur Limoncello. A wedge of lemon is also often used to add flavor to water.
Lemon juice is typically squeezed onto fish dishes; the acidic juice neutralizes the taste of amines in fish by converting them to nonvolatile ammonium salts.
In addition, lemon juice is widely used, along with other ingredients, when marinating meat before cooking: the acid provided by the juice partially hydrolyze the tough collagen fibers in the meat (tenderize the meat). The juice, however, is not an effective antibiotic, as is commonly thought.
Lemon juice is also sprinkled on cut fruit, such as apples, to prevent oxidation which would otherwise rapidly darken the fruit, making it less appetizing. Some people like to eat lemons as fruit, however water should be consumed afterwards to wash the citric acid and sugar from the teeth, which might otherwise promote tooth decay. It can be used on its own or with oranges to make marmalade.
100 milliliters lemon juice contain approximately 50 milligrams of vitamin C and 5 grams citric acid.
There is a belief in Ayurvedic medicine that a cup of hot water with lemon juice in it tonifies and purifies the liver.
Lemon battery
- Main article: Lemon battery
A common school experiment involving lemons is to attach electrodes and use them as a
battery to power a light. The electricity generated may also be used to power a motor to move the lemons (on wheels) like a car or truck. These experiments also work with other fruit and with
potatoes.
Lemon myrtle
In recent times, the Australian bush food
Lemon myrtle has become a popular alternative to lemons. The crushed and dried leaves and edible essential oils have a strong, sweet lemon taste, but contain no citric acid. Lemon myrtle is popular in foods that curdle with lemon juice, such as cheesecakes and ice-cream.
Gallery
Image:Lemon 8FruitAndFlower wb.jpg|Lemon fruit and flower
Image:Lemon closeup.jpg|Lemon Closeup
Image:Lemon02.jpg|Lemons
Image:Pair of lemons.jpg|Pair of lemons
Image:Lemon tree02.jpg|Lemon tree
Image:Lemon tree Berkeley closeup.jpg|Lemons on a tree
Image:Lemon tree flowers with ant.jpg|Lemon tree flowers
Image:UnripeLemon4.jpg|Unripe Meyer lemon
See also
External links
- (Purdue University) Morton, Julia F. 1987. "Lemon". pp. 160–168, in Fruits of warm climates. (Julia F. Morton, Miami)
- Andrew M. Watson, 1983. Agricultural Innovation in the Early Islamic World: The Diffusion of Crops and Farming Techniques, 700-1100. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press) pp 42-50
Citrus | Tropical agriculture | Arabic words
ليمون | Limun | Лимон | Llimona | Citron | Zitrone | Citrus x limon | Citrono | Citron | Limón | Limun | Lemon | Citrus × limon | לימון | Citrina | Citrom | Citroen | レモン | Sitron | Sitron | ظعزخعر | Cytryna zwyczajna | Limão | Лимон | Limoni | Lemon | Limona | Лимун | Sitruuna | Citron | เลมอน | Limon | 柠檬