From the Tropical Fruit News, Miami Rare Fruit Council International Miami RFCI
by Gene Joyner



The White Sapote


The white sapote (Casimiroa edulis) is a beautiful medium-sized spreading evergreen tree from Central America, especially Mexico. It grows to about 40 to 45 feet here in Florida and is very drought tolerant, and well adapted for most Florida soils.

Leaves are compound with 3-7 leaflets, but usually 5 is normal. Flowers can appear several times a year, but the heaviest bloom is in the late winter--January and February, on new growth.
 
The dull green fruit quickly follow, and attain diameters of 2 to 4 inches in some varieties. Certain varieties will attain a light yellow color at maturity, but many will remain a pale green even when mature. The skin is almost paper-thin and the inside flesh is cream color to yellowish, very soft and custard-like, very sweet. Some varieties are reported to have a slightly medicinal aftertaste, and you should make sure that you taste white sapote before buying a tree to be sure that you will enjoy this fruit.
 
The fruit is commonly eaten fresh, but is also used in preserves, marmalades, ice cream, sherbets or juices. Trees may have as many as 2 to 3 crops a year, with another crop often coming during the late fall or early winter. Sometimes blooms and maturing fruit from previous crops can be on the tree at the same time. Fruits contain large, hard seeds, usually about 3/4 inch, and are easily removed from the fruit.
 
There are a number of cultivars of white sapote, and members of the Rare Fruit Council in Florida have also selected seedlings with superior characteristics as well. Trees can be propagated from seed, but seedlings are highly variable in fruiting characteristics and take up to 7 years to begin bearing. Good bearing cultivars can be propagated by veneer grafting, budding, or air layering, and this is the way they are commonly propagated in tropical fruit nurseries. Propagation can be done almost anytime but spring is generally the preferred time.
 
When putting a white sapote in the landscape, allow sufficient space around the trees so that they do not interfere with other ornamental plants. They are generally considered drought tolerant, but should be irrigated weekly during dry spring weather and when fruit is first forming. Trees that are subjected to stress during blooming and early fruit development will often bear very small crops of fruit. Once well established, older trees generally survive quite well during periods of drought.
 
Trees should be fertilized for optimum growth and production with a fruit tree type fertilizer every 3 to 4 months. For the first year, young trees should be fertilized every other month.
 
Pruning on the white sapote is done as required by the growing situation and most heavy pruning should be done during the summer months to allow the trees time to regrow before the following winter.
 
Trees are considered fairly cold-hardy and mature trees can take temperatures down to 24° F., with young trees generally withstanding down to 26° F.

There are very few pests or serious disease problems of white sapote and once established in the landscape, spraying is rarely needed for any of these. Due to the softness of the fruits, they should be harvested from the tree prior to full maturity. If allowed to fall from the tree, much of the fruit will be badly bruised and damaged. A wooly-leafed variety of white sapote is also available, but is not easily found. The difference is that the wooly-leaf'white sapote has slightly larger fruits and leaves. The fruits also tend to be more oval in shape, but the flavor and other characteristics are similar to the regular white sapote.



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Bibliography

Joyner, Gene. The White Sapote. Rare Fruit Council International Miami RFCI, Tropical Fruit News, March 1994, p. 11.

Published 4 Feb. 2019 LR
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