Also known as Ground Cherries or Cape Gooseberry.  See the Physalis peruviana picture at Wikipedia.  I ate some of these fruit when I was in Germany last summer and I liked it.  Prior to that trip I hadn't even heard of it, let alone tasted one.  The proprietor of the restaurant where I had them knew them only as Physalis - no common or species name.  He was surprised to learn the English common names.
Last night I ran across mention of them in the May 2008 issue of Organic Gardening which I picked up at the YMCA book exchange.  They are seed-propagated and, like tomatillos, they have a papery husk.  Stored in the husk in a container that allows transpiration they are supposed to be good for up to 3 months at 50 F.  They get their common name of Ground Cherries because they drop to the ground before they ripen.  Thereafter, storage at room temperature for a week or less will ripen them.
Because they are in the tomato / tomatillo family they have the same disease susceptibilities so if I were to plant some next year I'd have to not use my normal garden area.
 
 
I grow them each year, they are easy and taste so good! Highly recommended / Tyra
ReplyDeleteThey have a really unusual taste. I bought seeds, but I haven't sown them yet.
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