All About the American Persimmon Tree

Discover which varieties of the American persimmon tree bear the tastiest fruit and learn how to properly plant and care for them.

Reader Contribution by Lee Reich
Updated on October 4, 2023
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Discover which varieties of the American persimmon tree bear the tastiest fruit and learn how to properly plant and care for them.

It’s raining persimmons (Diospyros virginiana) here, and I know the trees are mocking me. I put so much effort into my apple trees, with careful pruning and repeated spraying of various organic concoctions, and what do those trees offer in return? Little. Sometimes nothing. This is admittedly a bad site for growing apples in terms of late frosts, damp air, and proximity to woods that harbor apple pests.

The persimmons, though, I do practically nothing for them. Yet the fruit comes raining down, more than we can eat.

The American Persimmon Tree

Still, to quote W. F. Fletcher, writing in a USDA Farmers’ Bulletin back in 1915, “The [American] persimmon tree has received more criticism, both adverse and favorable, than almost any known species.” If your mouth has ever been puckered by an unripe American persimmon, you know much of the reason for this adverse criticism. I liken eating an unripe persimmon to having the business end of a vacuum cleaner in your mouth – and the sensation lingers even after you spit out the fruit.

Ah, but eating a thoroughly ripened persimmon is as pleasurable a gustatory experience as eating an unripe one is horrible. In contrast to the larger, firmer Japanese persimmon found in food markets, fruit of the American persimmon has the look and size of a cherry tomato, with a similar range of color, from yellow to orange to deep red. When ready to eat, an American persimmon is very soft, too soft for a market fruit, but fine for backyards, where fruits need travel no further than arm’s length. At that point, the flesh has a richness and texture something like a dried apricot that has been soaked in water, then dipped in honey and given a dash of spice.

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