Newsletter Subject

Grapefruit: As American as apple pie

From

qz.com

Email Address

hi@qz.com

Sent On

Tue, Feb 5, 2019 09:53 PM

Email Preheader Text

Citrus is a rare horticultural beast. All of the blood oranges and tangelos, ugli fruits, and yuzus

Citrus is a rare horticultural beast. All of the blood oranges and tangelos, ugli fruits, and yuzus that exist today come from just a [handful of original citrus varieties]( that started out 7 million years ago in Asia. As a genus, [citrus is all sexually compatible because it is so closely related]( buddha’s hand and a tangerine can cross and make a viable new fruit. It is also highly prone to mutation, meaning that new citrus varieties pop up all the time. Citrus arrived in the New World in 1493, on one of the 17 ships in the fleet that Christopher Columbus commandeered for his return. As he set to the business of colonization and genocide, the trees flourished in the Caribbean sun. The first known mention of the grapefruit—thought to be a cross between a sweet orange and a pomelo or shaddock—dates to 1750 in Barbados, according to the Oxford Companion to Food. By 1823, the fruit had traveled to Florida with a French count and slowly gained some commercial popularity. From morning orange juice to the lime juice that gives guacamole its tang, citrus is entwined in American food culture—but the grapefruit is a true product of the Americas. 🐦 [Tweet this!]( 🌐 [View this email on the web]( Sponsored by [Quartz Obsession] Grapefruit February 05, 2019 Born in the USA --------------------------------------------------------------- Citrus is a rare horticultural beast. All of the blood oranges and tangelos, ugli fruits, and yuzus that exist today come from just a [handful of original citrus varieties]( that started out 7 million years ago in Asia. As a genus, [citrus is all sexually compatible because it is so closely related]( buddha’s hand and a tangerine can cross and make a viable new fruit. It is also highly prone to mutation, meaning that new citrus varieties pop up all the time. Citrus arrived in the New World in 1493, on one of the 17 ships in the fleet that Christopher Columbus commandeered for his return. As he set to the business of colonization and genocide, the trees flourished in the Caribbean sun. The first known mention of the grapefruit—thought to be a cross between a sweet orange and a pomelo or shaddock—dates to 1750 in Barbados, according to the Oxford Companion to Food. By 1823, the fruit had traveled to Florida with a French count and slowly gained some commercial popularity. From morning orange juice to the lime juice that gives guacamole its tang, citrus is entwined in American food culture—but the grapefruit is a true product of the Americas. 🐦 [Tweet this!]( 🌐 [View this email on the web]( Obsessed with Quartz? --------------------------------------------------------------- Have you tried our new app? You can: - Follow your favorite thinkers from technology, finance, business, politics, and more - Keep up with news for you, curated by Quartz editors - Pick stories that interest you and share your ideas with the community - Personalize your feed with the topics you love - Engage with an informed community of leaders, subject matter experts, and curious minds [Get the app for free]( AP Photo/Paul Sancya By the numbers [30 ft (9 m):]( A standard grapefruit tree’s potential height [1,500 lbs:]( Amount of fruit that a single citrus grapefruit tree can yield [1993:]( The year when Texas red grapefruit was appointed the state’s official fruit [85:]( Number of medications that have the potential to interact with grapefruit [6.65 million:]( Tons of grapefruit produced globally in 2017/2018 Sponsored by Flipboard 10 for Today: Discover Great Reads Right Now --------------------------------------------------------------- Flipboard's got a shortcut to discovering some of the best content out there: 10 for Today. This collection of handpicked stories will take you behind the headlines, illuminate fascinating people, and help you be better in all aspects of your life.[10 for Today]( What's in a name? Weapon of condescension --------------------------------------------------------------- Grapefruit has a strange name, which likely comes from some island amalgam of French and English. The smaller varieties that grew in grape-like clusters were the norm when the fruit was first discovered in the Caribbean. “Grappes” is the French word for cluster. Cluster fruit. The strangeness of the fruit itself and the misleading name made it slower to catch on than sweet, juicy oranges and sunny, tart lemons. That relative obscurity has, on occasion, made the grapefruit a jumping off point to condescend to others. Supposedly, it was the Great Depression that put the grapefruit in front of a wide American audience, during which surplus grapefruit, along with other agricultural extras, were handed out to hungry families. One [widely noted story]( claims that housewives who had never seen grapefruit before reported that it was too tough to eat—even after an hour of boiling. Similarly, Aziz Ansari has a famous bit overhearing 50 Cent, the rapper, ordering a grapefruit soda in a restaurant and then being confused when it wasn’t purple. [50 Cent has since refuted this anecdote](. These stories share a common know-it-all spirit infused with a soupçon of racism and classism. Can you believe? Rappers make a lot of money, but they still don’t really recognize common middle-class items. Can you believe? Poor women had no idea what a grapefruit was so they just boiled and boiled them, poor dears. Reuters/Scott Audette Pop quiz What is the largest citrus-producing country in the world? United StatesBrazilChinaIndia Correct. Incorrect. If your inbox doesn’t support this quiz, find the solution at bottom of email. A diet by any other name --------------------------------------------------------------- The Grapefruit Diet, also known as the Hollywood Diet, is one of the original fad diets, and is based on the idea that a special enzyme in grapefruit burns fat. [Researchers have not found evidence]( to support this idea beyond baseline benefits that come from adding fruits and vegetables to every meal. [There is an enzyme]( grapefruit that interferes with the way the body processes some substances, notably many medications, but it does not have a slimming or fat burning effect. The gist of the Grapefruit Diet—sort of like the Cabbage Soup Diet or the Master Cleanse Lemonade Diet—is a [very low-calorie, low-carb meal plan that includes a grapefruit or grapefruit juice]( at every meal. We’re talking 800 calories a day. Dieters follow the plan for 10 (or sometimes 12) days, then take two days off, then repeat. [First popular in the 1930s]( the Grapefruit Diet came back in the 1980s when it was sometimes referred to as the super-sane and healthy-sounding “10 Pounds in 10 Days Diet.” Have a friend who would enjoy our Obsession with Grapefruit? [ [Forward link to a friend](mailto:?subject=Thought you'd enjoy.&body=Read this Quartz Obsession email – to the email – Giphy Watch this! The Grapefruit Diet was popular enough to inspire a [Weird Al parody]( of the song “Zoot Suit Riot.” Coca-Cola Brief history Diet soda diplomacy --------------------------------------------------------------- Donald Trump [famously drinks Diet Coke](. A lot of it. He’s not the first Oval Office occupant to be way into diet soda, though. That was Lyndon B. Johnson. Fresca, a lime-and-grapefruit flavored diet soda, was introduced in 1966, and Johnson was very, very into it, possibly because grapefruit is a major crop in his home state of Texas. There are unsubstantiated tales of Johnson’s Fresca tap in the Oval Office (it seems that he was actually more into having it served to him by a butler), and not only did he enjoy drinking Fresca, he enjoyed [using it as a power play]( by [bullying other politicians into drinking it with him](. Sometimes a diet soda is not just a low-calorie beverage. Has apple juice ever been used as a ploy to ignore the results of a [senator’s fact-finding mission on a military action]( in a foreign country? Giphy Million-dollar question What makes pink grapefruits pink? --------------------------------------------------------------- In 1907, the first pink grapefruit was discovered in Florida. If the grapefruit itself is a product of the New World as a whole, the pink grapefruit is wholly American. Its brightly hued flesh comes from increased levels of beta carotene and lycopene. Pink grapefruit may look artificial, but its flavor is notoriously difficult to synthesize in a lab. The chemical that gives grapefruit its distinct flavor is called nookatone and it is very, very potent stuff. That means that grapefruit itself has a very small amount of nookatone, making it expensive to create grapefruit essence from actual grapefruit for seltzer, shower gel, candy, or perfume. Oxford Biotrans, a British biochemical company, makes nookatone from valencene, a chemical found in other citrus fruit at much higher levels. “Historically, it’s a very interesting one for academics to work on because it’s quite a difficult chemical synthesis,” says Dr. Matthew Hodges, Director of Commercial Operations at Biotrans of nookatone. “They enjoy challenges.” Dr. Hodges notes that specific compounds go in and out of style in the fragrance and flavor industry, and that citrus in general is very on trend currently. “These wax and wane, one thing becomes popular for awhile and then it disappears. Grapefruit is a good measure for that,” he says. “We see people more aware of the compound now and they’re putting it in more products.” Fun fact! The first grapefruit to [receive a US patent]( was the Ruby Red, in 1929. Reuters/Mariana Bazo Poll What's your citrus style? [Click here to vote]( Grapefruit is greatYou had me at shaddockLimes are sublimeMore of a pomelo person 💬let's talk In yesterday’s game of rock-paper-[scissors]( it was scissors (38%), paper (32%), and rock (30%). 📧 Seb wrote: “LOVE Obsession. But how could you do scissors without mentioning the classic [Allan Ahlberg poem?]( 🤔 [What did you think of today’s email?](mailto:obsession%2Bfeedback@qz.com?cc=&subject=Thoughts%20about%20grapefruit&body=) 💡 [What should we obsess over next?](mailto:obsession%2Bideas@qz.com?cc=&subject=Obsess%20over%20this%20next.&body=) 🎲 [Show me a random Obsession]( Today’s email was written by [Annaliese Griffin]( edited by [Jessanne Collins]( and produced by [Luiz Romero](. The correct answer to the quiz is China. Enjoying the Quartz Obsession? [Send this link]( to a friend! If you click a link to an e-commerce site and make a purchase, we may receive a small cut of the revenue, which helps support our ambitious journalism. See [here]( for more information. Not enjoying it? No worries. [Click here]( to unsubscribe. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10011 | United States [Share this email](

Marketing emails from qz.com

View More
Sent On

28/11/2023

Sent On

27/11/2023

Sent On

25/11/2023

Sent On

24/11/2023

Sent On

23/11/2023

Sent On

22/11/2023

Email Content Statistics

Subscribe Now

Subject Line Length

Data shows that subject lines with 6 to 10 words generated 21 percent higher open rate.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Words

The more words in the content, the more time the user will need to spend reading. Get straight to the point with catchy short phrases and interesting photos and graphics.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Number of Images

More images or large images might cause the email to load slower. Aim for a balance of words and images.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Time to Read

Longer reading time requires more attention and patience from users. Aim for short phrases and catchy keywords.

Subscribe Now

Average in this category

Subscribe Now

Predicted open rate

Subscribe Now

Spam Score

Spam score is determined by a large number of checks performed on the content of the email. For the best delivery results, it is advised to lower your spam score as much as possible.

Subscribe Now

Flesch reading score

Flesch reading score measures how complex a text is. The lower the score, the more difficult the text is to read. The Flesch readability score uses the average length of your sentences (measured by the number of words) and the average number of syllables per word in an equation to calculate the reading ease. Text with a very high Flesch reading ease score (about 100) is straightforward and easy to read, with short sentences and no words of more than two syllables. Usually, a reading ease score of 60-70 is considered acceptable/normal for web copy.

Subscribe Now

Technologies

What powers this email? Every email we receive is parsed to determine the sending ESP and any additional email technologies used.

Subscribe Now

Email Size (not include images)

Font Used

No. Font Name
Subscribe Now

Copyright © 2019–2025 SimilarMail.