On the East Coast, winter gardens and rising areas are asleep, locked in chilly, and bleakly gray, with bare-branched brown aid. Botanical life has been halted by frost. The one native fare round is the succession of apples and pears that come to market, introduced out and in of chilly storage since fall. Regardless of the cheerless outlook, these early months of the yr convey a subtropical fruit to ripeness—simply not on this coast: It’s cherimoya season in California. Fattening amongst their massive, lush leaves, they’re obtainable countrywide by the boxful on the click on of a mouse. Each February I escape on-line to order a boxful from Rincon Tropics in Carpinteria (the place the primary cherimoya seeds have been planted in 1871), and a couple of week later it’s at our doorstep.
In frigid February, the cherimoyas are a short, scrumptious dive into what seasons imply on this climactically numerous nation; they’re native, to not frozen New York, clearly, however to that different shore, and one other manner of late-winter life and harvest.
Pictures by Marie Viljoen.
Probing fastidiously of their boxed nest of shredded brown paper, my fingers uncover the heavy fruit and carry them out. The cherimoyas resemble—like a Rorschach take a look at—sleeping armadillos, curled tight; the squat hearts of cartoon alligators; inexperienced grenades; or algal clay orbs marked by the cautious thumbprints of their maker. They’re typically referred to as ice cream fruit—protected by their leathery shell, their white flesh is creamily candy, juicy, and aromatic.
I do see cherimoyas at native supermarkets, however fitfully. Their costs are within the $7.99 to $12.99 vary per pound, and it’s arduous to inform how they’ve been handled. They ripen erratically and typically erratically, if they’ve been refrigerated for a very long time. (Presently of yr their soursop cousins seem at Caribbean markets, and I’ve made snowy treks throughout Prospect Park to the Little Caribbean neighborhood of Brooklyn to seek out these at Labay Market, whose proprietor flies his fruit in from his farm in Grenada. They’re monumental, and good.)

The trove from Rincon Tropics is a present to myself. These cherimoyas are grown by the Brown household—Tony Brown was the primary to domesticate them commercially in america, about 50 years in the past, and they’re shipped to clients by his son, Nick Brown, who pivoted from farmers’ markets to mail-order in the course of the first months of the COVID pandemic. They ripen (like avocados) a couple of days after arrival and are in season for one more two to 3 months.
A big field (4 to 5 hefty fruit) of cherimoyas from Rincon Tropics is $50.

Cherimoyas ripen at room temperature, and are candy when the stem-end yields to the stress of a mild thumb. At that time they are often chilled for a couple of days should you can’t eat them without delay. After consuming the primary ripe fruit straight up, with a spoon, I settle into the duty of eradicating the seeds from the remaining, to make an annual, memorably good cherimoya granita.
Their taste varies from cultivar to cultivar. Typically, ripe cherimoya are intensely candy and so juicy that moisture swimming pools within the shell as you scoop out the mushy flesh. The sweetness is made extra fascinating by some lemon-sherbert edges and a carefully tropical funk, close to the pear-grained perimeter.

Botanically, cherimoyas are Annona cherimola, and are thought-about native to Andean South America, though it’s attainable that their origins are Mesoamerican. Time and evolving science will inform. Regardless, cherimoyas have been eaten and cultivated by the Incas, and depicted on pottery that predates them. The fruit belong to the identical Annonoceae household as custard apples, soursops, and candy sops (additionally referred to as sugar apples)—all sharing dimpled or knobbly inexperienced pores and skin, with white flesh and large seeds; in addition to to the native Jap North American pawpaw, whose clean pores and skin hides apricot flesh and the identical shiny seeds.