Fruits of Oceania

21 fruits

Every fruit in the encyclopedia grown significantly in Oceania — from market staples to regional treasures.

Apple illustration

Apple

The world's most cultivated temperate fruit — crisp, sweet-tart, endlessly varied across 7,500+ cultivars, and the keeper of the cold-storage crown that puts it on shelves year-round.

Avocado illustration

Avocado

The fruit that thinks it's a fat — buttery, savory, and unique in the plant kingdom for its oil-rich flesh. Botanically a single-seeded berry; culturally, toast's best friend and guacamole's soul.

Bignay illustration

Bignay

Long grape-like clusters of tiny berries that ripen unevenly from green to red to near-black — sour to sweet-tart on one string — famous across the Philippines as a wine and jam fruit.

Blackcurrant illustration

Blackcurrant

Europe's intense purple powerhouse — too tart and musky to snack raw, unbeatable as cordial, jam, and crème de cassis, with vitamin C levels that made it wartime Britain's citrus substitute.

Blueberry illustration

Blueberry

North America's berry gift to the world — sweet-mild, snackable, and the poster child of antioxidant research. Wild lowbush berries are tiny, intense, and worth the hunt.

Breadfruit illustration

Breadfruit

The starch that grows on trees — a football of creamy, potato-like flesh that fed Polynesian voyages and sparked the mutiny on the Bounty. Roasted, it earns the name; fried, it beats the potato at its own game.

Cape gooseberry illustration

Cape gooseberry

A golden marble in a papery lantern husk — sweet-tart and tomatoey-tropical, eaten fresh as a fancy garnish, dried like a raisin, or cooked into jams across the Andes and beyond.

Coconut illustration

Coconut

The tree of life — drink, food, oil, bowl, and rope from one ocean-borne seed. Two fruits in one lifespan: young buko with electrolyte water and silky jelly, then mature nut with rich white meat.

Feijoa illustration

Feijoa

New Zealand's adopted obsession — an egg-shaped South American myrtle fruit tasting of pineapple, guava, and mint at once, scooped with a spoon and impossible to buy where it doesn't grow.

Finger lime illustration

Finger lime

An Australian rainforest citrus shaped like a stubby finger, filled with tiny juice pearls that burst like caviar — a native bushfood turned fine-dining garnish.

Grape illustration

Grape

Humanity's most consequential fruit — eight thousand years of wine, raisins, and table grapes from one vine species. Modern breeding turned it into nature's candy; fermentation turned it into civilization's drink.

Kiwano illustration

Kiwano

A spiky orange melon from the African drylands, its alien shell hiding lime-green jelly studded with seeds — refreshing, cucumber-meets-kiwi, and more spectacle than sweetness.

Kiwi illustration

Kiwi

A Chinese vine fruit rebranded by New Zealand into a global icon — emerald flesh, edible black seeds, dessert-bright acidity, and more vitamin C than an orange, gram for gram.

Lychee illustration

Lychee

China's imperial berry — rose-scented, grape-fleshed, jade-seeded, and adored for two millennia. An emperor famously ran pony express relays just to deliver it fresh; one taste explains why.

Pepino illustration

Pepino

A mild, mellow Andean fruit that looks like a purple-streaked golden egg and tastes like a cross between honeydew and cucumber — refreshing, low-sugar, and eaten like a melon.

Tamarillo illustration

Tamarillo

An egg-shaped, jewel-toned relative of the tomato — tangy, savoury-sweet flesh with an edible skin best peeled, eaten spooned from the shell or cooked into chutneys across the Andes and New Zealand.

Tangelo illustration

Tangelo

A juicy citrus hybrid of tangerine and grapefruit (or pomelo) — loose-skinned and easy to peel like a mandarin, but bigger, tarter, and gushing with juice, often with a distinctive "bell" neck.

Ugni illustration

Ugni

A tiny maroon berry with an outsized aroma — sweet-tart and perfumed with strawberry, guava, and bubblegum — foraged in Chile and famous as Queen Victoria's reputed favourite fruit.

Combine with more filters →