the taste of persimmon

Status
Not open for further replies.

alpacinou

Key Member
Joined
Sep 30, 2019
Member Type
Interested in Language
Native Language
Persian
Home Country
Iran
Current Location
Iran
Hello.

Persimmons have a strange taste and effect on the tongue. They can become a little bit bitter and stick to your tongue and gum. I don't know how further to explain that.

Is there one word to describe that? I found "astringent" in dictionary but it says acidic but I'm not sure if persimmons are acidic.

What is the word?
 
Astringent.
 
I eat them regularly and never find them astringent or acidic. To me, their taste is sweet, with a texture reminiscent of papayas.

Z
 
Last edited:
In terms of flavour, sour and acidic are synonymous. If your dictionary says astringent only means acidic you need a better dictionary, alpacinoutd.
 
I eat them regularly and never find them astringent or acidic. To me, their taste is sweet, with a texture reminiscent of papayas.
Unripe persimmons are horribly astringent, especially the hachiya variety, which take approximately forever to ripen.
 
It's very difficult to get a ripe one in the frozen north where I live. But my wife's cousin in San Francisco had a persimmon tree in his yard, and I can testify that tree-ripened ones can be delicious.
 
I just ate a persimmon and have not found it to stick to the tongue or gum or is bitter. What we have are mostly imported from Korea.
 
Unripe ones are bitter- you could use acerbic as well as astringent. They're in season here at the moment. :-D
 
Astringency is the property of drying tissues out. If you've ever bitten into an unripe hachiya persimmon, you know what it feels like. They're tricky devils, too: they ripen from the tip to the stem end, so a fruit that's delicious on one end can be inedible on the other.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top