

Durian Delight and Feijoa Fun: Adventures in Banned, Forgotten, and Unusual Fruit
40 snips Sep 23, 2025
In this engaging conversation, science journalist Kate Evans shares her passion for the feijoa, a fruit synonymous with home for New Zealanders. She dives into its South American roots, unique bird-pollination, and the reasons it hasn't thrived in the U.S. The discussion also touches on the durian, notorious for its pungent smell and cultural significance, even being banned from public transit in some places. Together, they explore the intense feelings these unusual fruits evoke and what makes them so special to those who love them.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Childhood Feijoa Rituals
- Kate Evans grew up eating feijoas from her parents' orchard and remembers coming home from school to eat buckets of them.
- That childhood ritual made feijoa a powerful taste-of-home for her as an adult.
Feijoa's Unusual Pollination Strategy
- Feijoa evolved to attract mammals and birds by scent and edible petals rather than colorful flesh or nectar.
- Its unusual pollination strategy (petals as food) shaped its fragrance and ecology.
How Feijoa Reached Europe
- A single feijoa specimen Sello sent to Berlin sat in a herbarium for decades before being named Selloiana.
- Botanical exploration stories link the fruit's arrival in Europe to explorers like Friedrich Sello and Édouard André.