Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Out of Doors for Women, Vol. 1
T he small apricots were hardly to be recognized - scarcely as large as plums but of fair ?avor. A good drummer should be able to sell every tree in the nurseries of California, if he were to travel one season through Mexico with truthful representations of our fruit.
At Irapuato the natives offer the passengers of the Mexican Central railway fine strawberries the year round. The tourist is often disappointed to find only one layer of the large lusciousberries on the top of his basket, but he will find the small berries that fill the bulk of the basket just as sweet, and if philosophical in mind will congratulate himself on having thrice as many ber ries for his money as if they were all large!
The native fruits were mostly pleasant, though some are not at first palatable, until a taste has been acquired for them. The Mango, Mammee, Sapotas, Anonas, Pineapples and Bananas iwere all duly tested, but in general pronounced inferior to our temperate fruits.
Another surprise was to find potatoes, raised in California, upon the table in Mexico City - where I was told they retail at twenty. Five cents per pound! (at wholesale bringing eight cents per pound).
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