Laraha (Citrus × aurantium subsp. currassuviencis),[1] or Curaçao orange (Citrus aurantium var. currassuviencis),[2] is the name of a citrus tree that grows on the island of Curaçao, and also the fruit of this tree. The name is cognate with Portuguese laranja for the orange. A descendant of the bitter orange, the fruit of the laraha is too bitter and too fibrous to be considered edible.
This article includes a list of general references, but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations. (May 2015) |
| Laraha | |
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| Species | Citrus × aurantium subsp. currassuviencis |
| Cultivar | 'Laraha' |
| Origin | Curaçao, south Caribbean |
Seville orange trees transplanted on Curaçao from Spain in 1527 did not thrive in the arid climate and soil of this Southern Caribbean island.[2] As the trees were then abandoned, the fruit evolved from a bright orange color into the green laraha. The dried peels of the laraha, however, were discovered to be pleasantly aromatic,[2] and experimentation with the extracts of these peels led to the creation of Curaçao liqueur.
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| Mandarin oranges |
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| Sahul citrus (former Microcitrus, Eromocitrus, Clymenia and Oxanthera genera) |
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