Have you ever heard of a cumquat? It’s orange’s tiny cousin! Here are three Haku poems by students from Mary MacKillop College, Kensington SA. Have I mentioned how much I love mangoes? I also love mangoes when they’re squeezed. But berries naturally contain seeds don’t they? So how can we grow seedless grapes? Grapes are the perfect shape to pop in your mouth! These ready-wrapped berries contain water, sugars (glucose and fructose) and organic acids (tartaric, malic and a little citric). So don’t feel sad for the grape eaten by this little ape. Grapes are an example of a soft fruit that WANTS to be eaten! That way, its seeds are dispersed far away from the parent vine. One of Earth’s beauties, the best fruit around! Just don’t eat the ones with mouldy fungi!ġ6 Tomato Decisions (Limerick) by GabrielleĪ succulent gourd that’s green and round, When fruit’s your thing and you’re feeling hungry, (Pennant Hills Public School, Pennant Hills, NSW) (Pennant Hills Public School, Pennant Hills NSW) I’ve detailed their properties, please don’t ignore. Some soluble vitamins go down the drainage. If it’s boiled in water the chemistry changes. Whether eaten as sauerkraut or boiled with sprouts Their taste’s from the chemical kaempferol Not all the cabbages grown for our dishesĪre sweet and mild-tasting, just what one wishes. Then they sprout and then they’re picked.įor dinner they’re cooked and taste perfect.
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The hungry caterpillars add to their woes. So creatures and humans are well content.ĭo your cabbages and other brassica vegetables sometimes taste a bit … bitter? That will be the flavinoid (flavour chemical) kaempferol! They help make Earth healthy and nourished, With fruits and vegetables life can flourish, (St Peter’s Catholic College, Tuggerah, NSW) Please enjoy our harvest of tasty poetry!Ģ2 Delectable Fruits and Vegetables by Michayla Thank you to everyone who shared their poems. Science Rhymes grew a collection of YOUR SCIENCE POEMS about the fruity facts and leafy love we have for our fruits and vegetables, to celebrate this year’s SCIENCE WEEK (14-22 August).