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← 2014 Advent Botany – Day 20 – Christmas Box (Sarcococca confusa)
2014 Advent Botany – Day 22 – A Partridge in a Pear tree →

2014 Advent Botany – Day 21 – Dates (Phoenix dactylifera)

Posted on December 21, 2014 by Alastair Culham
A fruiting inflorescence of a Saudi Arabian date palm cultivar.

A fruiting inflorescence of a Saudi Arabian date palm cultivar.

What would Christmas be without dried dates?   My personal Christmas favourite is to remove the date seeds and fill the void with a piece of marzipan (almond paste).  However there are many more ways to enjoy dates and a remarkable variety of dates in cultivation.  The biggest producer is Egypt. In Saudi Arabia there are more than 450 date cultivars and in Oman more than 200. Dates are traditionally eaten either fresh, dried or preserved in honey.  Fresh dates are far less stickily sweet than dried ones but have a shorter season as they do not store well.  Dried dates are available all year round and can be eaten as an accompaniment to strong coffee where the sweetness balances the bitterness of the coffee.  Fresh dates are becoming more readily available in the UK now.

The date festival held during harvest season where farmers can offer the different varieties they grow

The date festival held during harvest season where farmers can offer the different varieties they grow

Two of our current students have a great interest in dates:

Widad Aljuhani has written extensively about dates in Saudi Arabia and is working for a PhD on identification techniques and sex determination in the Saudi cultivars. She provided this photograph of the annual date festival in Saudi Arabia that gives an idea of the sheer scale of date production there.

Thuraiya Al Jabri is a MSc student from Oman with a great personal and professional interest in dates and who has written an intriguing blog about the botany and cultural importance of dates in Oman.  She reports on a whole range of uses for the date palm beyond fruit production.  Did you know bees are kept in hollowed out date palm trunks, and that baskets and tabseel date cooking are other ways to use products of the date palm.

Typical Omani date farm

Typical Omani date farm

The date palm has also provided Reading University Herbarium with one of its more unusual specimens, collected in Morocco by Stephen Jury.

Is RNG really a zoo? Intuitive use of date palm leaf.

Is RNG really a zoo? Intuitive use of date palm leaf.

For those of a more culinary bent Dawn Bazely has kindly sent to link to Devils on horseback – bacon wrapped, almond stuffed dates!

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About Alastair Culham

A professional botanist and biologist with an interest in promoting biological knowledge and awareness to all.
View all posts by Alastair Culham →
This entry was posted in Advent, Herbarium RNG, Public Engagement with Science and tagged #AdventBotany, Date palm, Dates, Oman, Phoenix dactylifera, Saudi Arabia. Bookmark the permalink.
← 2014 Advent Botany – Day 20 – Christmas Box (Sarcococca confusa)
2014 Advent Botany – Day 22 – A Partridge in a Pear tree →
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Last reply was April 26, 2019
  1. #Advent Botany – the full story! | Dr M Goes Wild
    View December 22, 2014

    […] Read more on #AdventBotany Dates including the work of researchers at the University of Reading at Culham Research group. […]

    Reply
  2. Getting Ready for #AdventBotany – here’s a reprise of 2014 | Culham Research Group
    View November 30, 2015

    […] Day 21 – Dates (Phoenix dactylifera) […]

    Reply
  3. #AdventBotany Day 10: Have yourself a microscopically Merry Christmas | Culham Research Group
    View December 10, 2017

    […] with the cheese, warn fellow diners to take care with the hard stone in their delicious drupe (date), join in the struggle to break into a true nut (walnut) and, my personal favourite, uncover the […]

    Reply
  4. A VLOG to celebrate the 5th birthday of the #AdventBotany blog series | Bazely Biology lab: collaborative, interdisciplinary, fun
    View April 26, 2019

    […] also contributed recipes to posts about dates and parsnips, although on checking, I discovered that link rot has set in to the parsnip and pear […]

    Reply
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