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girlgroupgirl

growing a vine, can you ID?

girlgroupgirl
19 years ago

Hi:

I ordered seeds for an interesting vine, now I can't remember the name of it. I think it's Indian, and it has the teeniest little fruits on it that look like little watermelons on the exterior, and inside resemble cucumbers. The are about an inch long and same circumfrance. It's a very vigourous vine with maple leaf shaped leaves and thin, twining stems.

I remeber reading you can eat them, somehow. Maybe only pickled?

GGG

Comments (10)

  • piksi_hk
    19 years ago

    Glynis,
    I believe I had the same vine. They are like mini watermelons but the skin turns yellow...the inside has many seeds like the cucumber. They stay small about an inch long like you said. They tast sour but not as sour as a lemon but definately not sweet.

    I finally pulled it up...don't know the name of this plant.

    Betsy

  • girlgroupgirl
    Original Author
    19 years ago

    Thanks Betsy:
    It's like Barbie doll watermelons, isn't it? Well, that's what the little girl next door and I have been using them for!!
    Thanks for letting me know they turn yellow, I'll keep the yellowing fruits picked off of them. I guess they are sort of like pickles without needing to be pickled?

    I'm sure the vine name started with an "M".

    GGG

  • paperwhite
    19 years ago

    All,

    It is called 'Ivy Gourd' and in Hindi it is called 'Tindora'. I have been looking for seeds for quite a while now, can you please tell me the source. They taste very good it they are stir fried.

    Thanks in advance

  • chaman
    19 years ago

    Yes, paperwhite said it correctly.It is very common vegetable in Indian subcontinent.It is known as "Tindora "as well as "Ivy Gourd".It is suated and stir fried too.
    Growing from seeds is very difficult and will take long time for flowering and fruiting.It is easy to propagate from cuttings, thick roots and from matured bulbs if available.Tindoras are very sensitive to frost.Even very short exposure will kill the plant.I usually plant them outside after Mother's day, pullout by end of september and store in warm place inside the house.

    chiman

  • girlgroupgirl
    Original Author
    19 years ago

    I grew the seeds easily, don't winter sow them (if you practice that method).
    I sowed them in really nice potting soil, with the tiniest covering, placed the containers on these aluminum drip pans I bought. They are thick metal and both absorb and reflect the heat so it's like a heat mat (although you might not need them in Arizona!!). Sow outside because as chiman rightly points out, they are hard to get going because they tend to dampen off. I put a little pearlite over the top of them.
    I have more seeds. Just email me your address. I'll save some matured fruits too and dry the seed so people can have them. I bought them from either JL Hudson or The Fragrant path.
    The fruit has been on for at least a month, so they should be ready for stir frying then. Guess what's for dinner tomorrow!
    In cooking in stir fry, since they were described as a bitter vegetable, I assume that you do not add in mustards or bitter greens etc.

    GGG

  • gponder
    19 years ago

    I've gotten my plants from Log House Plants here on the west coast. They market it as a cucumber under the name ÂMexican Sour GherkinÂÂ
    Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds now sells the seeds. Here's a link to their page

    Here is a link that might be useful: Mexican Sour Gherkin

  • solanum1
    19 years ago

    Mexican Sour Gherkin is Melothria scabra. The fruit are edible raw or cooked.

    Tindora (or Ivy Gourd) is Coccinia grandis. It can be propagated by seeds but the fruit are bitter and only the leaves and young stems are edible. The Tindora which produces edible fruit is mainly propagated by cuttings or,like chiman said, by roots.
    Rose-Marie

  • carolb_w_fl_coastal_9b
    19 years ago

    I just saw this @ Seed Savers & thought of this thread....

    {{gwi:387690}}

    Here is a link that might be useful: Mexican Sour Gherkin

  • carolb_w_fl_coastal_9b
    19 years ago

    FWIW, here's a pic of Coccinia grandis from Google's image search:

  • Violet_Z6
    18 years ago

    Did you ever eat them girlgroupgirl?

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