Dictionary Definition
watermelon
Noun
1 an African melon [syn: watermelon
vine, Citrullus
vulgaris]
2 large oblong or roundish melon with a hard
green rind and sweet watery red or occasionally yellowish
pulp
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- A plant of the genus Citrullus, a variety of melon.
- The fruit of the watermelon plant, having a green rind and watery flesh that is bright red when ripe and contains black pips.
- (derogatory slang) An environmentalist with socialist leanings (from the similarily to the fruit, being green on the outside, and red on the inside).
Translations
plant
- Albanian: shalqi, bostan
- Dutch: watermeloen
- Estonian: arbuus, vesimelon
- Finnish: vesimeloni
- French: pastèque, melon d'eau
- Greek: υδροπεπονιά (iðropeponiá) , καρπουζιά (karpuziá)
- Hebrew:
- Kurdish:
- Lithuanian: arbūzas
- Polish: arbuz
- Portuguese: melancia, melancieira
- Romanian: pepene
- Russian: арбуз
- Serbian: lubenica }, bostan
- Spanish: sandía
- Swedish: vattenmelon
- Turkish: karpuz
fruit
- Albanian: shalqi, bostan
- Chinese: 西瓜 (xīguā)
- Danish: vandmelon
- Dutch: watermeloen
- Estonian: arbuus, vesimelon
- Finnish: vesimeloni
- French: pastèque , melon d'eau
- German: Wassermelone
- Greek: υδροπεπόνι (iðropepóni) , καρπούζι (karpúzi)
- Hebrew:
- Hindi: तरबूज (tarabūja), कलिंदा (kalindā)
- Hungarian: görögdinnye
- Isthmus Zapotec: xandié
- Italian: cocomero, anguria
- Japanese: スイカ (or すいか) suika
- Korean: 수박 (subak)
- Kurdish:
- Lao: (maakmoo)
- Lithuanian: arbūzas
- Marathi: कलिंगड (kalingad)
- Polish: arbuz
- Portuguese: melancia
- Russian: арбуз
- Serbian: lubenica }, bostan
- Slovene: lubenica
- Spanish: sandía , melón italbrac Cuba, patilla italbrac Venezuela
- Swahili: tikiti (noun 5/6)
- Swedish: vattenmelon
- Telugu: పుచ్చకాయ
- Thai: (dtaeng moh)
- Turkish: karpuz
derogatory slang: environmentalist with
socialist leanings
- Finnish: viherpiipertäjä (doesn't imply socialism)
Extensive Definition
Watermelon (Citrullus lanatus (Thunb.)
Matsum & Nakai, family Cucurbitaceae)
refers to both fruit and
plant of a vine-like
(climber and trailer) herb
originally from southern Africa and one of
the most common types of melon. This flowering
plant produces a special type of fruit known by botanists as a pepo,
which has a thick rind
(exocarp)
and fleshy center (mesocarp and endocarp); pepos are derived from
an inferior ovary and are characteristic of the Cucurbitaceae. The
watermelon fruit, loosely considered a type of melon (although not in the genus
Cucumis),
has a smooth exterior rind (green and yellow) and a juicy, sweet,
usually red or yellow, but sometimes orange, interior flesh. The
flesh consists of highly developed placental tissue within the
fruit.
History
David Livingstone,an explorer of Africa, described watermelon as abundant in the Kalahari desert, where it is believed to have originated. There, the ancestral melon grows wild and is known as the Tsamma melon (Citrullus lanatus var tastius). It is recognizable by its pinnatifid leaves and prolific fruit, up to 100 melons on a single vine. For this reason it is a popular source of water in the diet of the indigenous people. The flesh is similar to the rind of a watermelon and is often known as citron melon (distinct from the actual citron, of the citrus family); it is used for making jam and other preserves, and because of its high content of pectin is popular as a constituent of jams, jellies, and other gelled preserves. It has established itself in the wild in Baja California.It is not known when the plant was first
cultivated, but Zohary and Hopf note evidence of its cultivation in
the Nile
Valley from at least as early as the second
millennium BC. Finds of the characteristically large seed are
reported in Twelfth
dynasty sites; numerous watermelon seeds were recovered from
the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun.
By the 10th century AD, watermelons were being
cultivated in China, which is today
the world's single largest watermelon producer. By the 13th
century, Moorish invaders had
introduced the fruit to Europe; and, according to John Mariani's
The Dictionary of American Food and Drink, "watermelon" made its
first appearance in an English dictionary in 1615.
In Vietnam, legend holds that watermelon was
discovered in Vietnam long before it reached China, in the era of
the Hùng
Kings. According to legend, watermelon was discovered by Prince Mai
An
Tiêm, an adopted son of the 11th Hùng King. When he was exiled
unjustly to an island, he was told that if he could survive for six
months, he would be allowed to return. When he prayed for guidance,
a bird flew past and dropped a seed. He cultivated the seed and
called its fruit "dưa tây" or western melon, because the birds who
ate it flew from the west. When the Chinese took over Vietnam in
about 110 BC, they called the melons "dưa hảo" (good melon) or "dưa
hấu". "dưa Tây", "dưa hảo", "dưa hấu" -- all words for
"watermelon". An Tiêm's island is now a peninsula in the suburban
district of Nga Sơn.
Museums Online South Africa list watermelons as
having been introduced to North
American
Indians in the 1500s. Early French explorers found Native
Americans cultivating the fruit in the Mississippi
Valley. Many sources list the watermelon as being introduced in
Massachusetts
as early as 1629. Southern
food historian John Egerton has said he believes African slaves
helped introduce the watermelon to the United
States. Texas Agricultural Extension horticulturalist Jerry
Parsons, Ph.D., lists African slaves and European colonists as
having distributed watermelons to many areas of the world. Parsons
also mentions the crop being farmed by Native Americans in Florida (by 1664)
and the Colorado
River area (by 1799). Other early watermelon sightings include
the Midwestern
states (1673), Connecticut
(1747), and the Illiana region
(1822).
Until the 1940s, however, it was hard to find
watermelons in good condition at grocery stores. Melon lovers had
to grow their own, which tended not to keep for long, purchase them
from local grocers supplied by truck
farmers, or purchase them from roadside produce stands. Now
they can be found in most local grocery stores, and if preferred in
slices or whole, with seeds or without.
Then Charles Fredric Andrus, a horticulturist at
the
USDA Vegetable Breeding Laboratory in Charleston,
South Carolina, set out to produce a disease-resistant and
wilt-resistant watermelon. The result was "that gray melon from
Charleston." Its oblong shape and hard rind made it easy to stack
and ship. Its adaptability meant it could be grown over a wide
geographical area. It produced high yields and was resistant to the
most serious watermelon diseases: anthracnose and fusarium
wilt. Today, farmers in approximately 44 states in the U.S.
grow watermelon commercially, and almost all these varieties have
some Charleston Gray in their lineage. Georgia,
Florida,
Texas,
California and
Arizona are
the USA's largest watermelon producers.
This now-common watermelon is large enough that
groceries often sell half or quarter melons. There are also some
smaller, spherical varieties of watermelon, both red- and
yellow-fleshed, sometimes called "icebox melons."
Culture
For commercial plantings, one beehive per acre (over 9,000 m² per hive) is the minimum recommendation by the US Department of Agriculture for pollination of conventional, seeded varieties. Because seedless hybrids have sterile pollen, pollinizer rows of varieties with viable pollen must also be planted. Since the supply of viable pollen is reduced and pollination is much more critical in producing the seedless variety, the recommended number of hives per acre, or pollinator density, increases to three hives per acre (1,300 m² per hive).In Japan, farmers of the
Zentsuji
region found a way to grow cubic watermelons, by growing the fruits
in glass boxes and letting them naturally assume the shape of the
receptacle. The square shape is designed to make the melons easier
to stack and store, but the square watermelons are often more than
double the price of normal ones. Pyramid shaped watermelons have
also been developed.
Seedless watermelons
Although so-called "seedless" watermelons have far fewer seeds than the seeded varieties, they generally contain at least a few soft, pale seeds. They are the product of crossing a female tetraploid plant (itself the product of genetic manipulation, using colchicine) with diploid pollen. The resulting triploid plant is sterile, but will produce the seedless fruit if pollenized by a diploid plant. For this reason, commercially available seedless watermelon seeds actually contain two varieties of seeds; that of the triploid seedless plant itself (recognizable because the seed is larger), and the diploid plant which is needed to pollenize the triploid. Unless both plant types are grown in the same vicinity, no seedless fruit will result. This system for growing seedless watermelons was first developed by H. Kihara in Japan and subsequently improved by O J Eigsti in partnership with Kihara. This scientific relationship was begun at the Third International Genetics Congress, held in Stockholm, Sweden in 1948.Their collaboration lasted for over 20 years
until Kihara died in 1986. Eigsti (who was a professor at Goshen
College in Goshen, IN) developed a tetraploid hybrid in the 1950s
which became the gold standard for all seedless watermelons
developed since then. In 1986, Eigsti's company was reorganized and
a joint venture (American Sunmelon) was entered into with SunWorld
International and in the ensuing eleven years seedless watermelon
became a staple in supermarkets around the world. In 1998, Eigsti's
tetraploid hybrid along with all of the assets of American Sunmelon
were sold to Syngenta, the seed producing arm of Novartis
A.G.
As food and drink
Fresh watermelon may be eaten in a variety of ways and is also often used to flavor summer drinks and smoothies.A one-cup serving of watermelon will provide
around 48 Calories.
Watermelon is an excellent source of vitamin C and
vitamin
A, with one serving containing 14.59 mg of vitamin C and 556.32
IU of vitamin A. Watermelon also provides significant amounts of
vitamin
B6 and vitamin B1, as
well as the minerals potassium and magnesium. Pink watermelon is
also a source of the potent carotenoid antioxidant, lycopene. The amino acid
citrulline was first
extracted from watermelon and analysed. Watermelons contain a
significant amount of citrulline and after
consumption of several kg an elevated concentration is measured in
the blood
plasma, this could be mistaken for citrullinaemia or other
urea
cycle disorder. Grilled watermelon, known as watermelon
steak due to its visual similarity to raw steak, has started to
become a popular item in restaurants.
Watermelon rinds are also edible, and sometimes
used as a vegetable.
In China, they are stir-fried,
stewed, or more often
pickled. When
stir-fried, the de-skinned and de-fruited rind is cooked with
olive
oil, garlic, chili
peppers, scallions, sugar and rum (and provides a great way to
utilize the whole watermelon). Pickled watermelon rind is also
commonly consumed in the Southern US,
Russia,
Ukraine,
and Romania.
Watermelon seeds are rich in fat and protein, and are widely eaten as
a snack, added to other
dishes, or used as an oilseed. Specialized varieties
are grown which have little watery flesh but concentrate their
energy into seed production. In China watermelon seeds are one of
the most common snack foods, popular especially with women, competing with sunflower
seeds, and sold roasted and seasoned. In West Africa,
they are pressed for oil, and are popular in egusi soup and other dishes. There
can be some confusion between seed-specialized watermelon varieties
and the colocynth, a
closely-related species with which they share many characteristics,
uses, and similar or identical names.
Watermelon is 92 percent water by weight. Throughout the
western
world, one may also find an alcoholic novelty known as a hard
watermelon, or a watermelon that has been enhanced with an alcoholic
beverage. This process involves boring
a hole into the watermelon, then pouring the liquor inside and allowing it to
mix with the flesh of the fruit. The watermelon is then cut and
served as normal.
Watermelon is also mildly diuretic.
Varieties
- Yellow Watermelon: variety of watermelon that has a yellow colored flesh. This particular type of watermelon has been described as "sweeter" and more "honey" flavored than the more popular red flesh watermelon.
- Orangeglo: This variety has a very sweet orange pulp, and is a large oblong fruit weighing 9-14kg (20-30 pounds). It has a light green rind with jagged dark green stripes. It takes about 90-100 days from planting to harvest.
- The Moon and Stars variety of watermelon has been around since at least the 1930s. The rind is purple/black and has many small yellow circles (stars) and one or two large yellow circles (moon). The melon weighs 9-23kg (20-50 pounds). The flesh is pink or red and has brown seeds. The foliage is also spotted. The time from planting to harvest is about 90 days.
- Cream of Saskatchewan: This variety consists of small round fruits, around 25cm (10 inches) in diameter. It has a quite thin, light green with dark green striped rind, with sweet white flesh and black seeds. It can grow well in cool climates. It was originally brought to Saskatchewan, Canada by Russian immigrants. These melons take 80-85 days from planting to harvest.
- Melitopolski: This variety has small round fruits roughly 28-30cm (11-12 inches) in diameter. It is an early ripening variety that originated from the Volga River region of Russia, an area known for cultivation of watermelons. The Melitopolski watermelons are seen piled high by vendors in Moscow in summer. This variety takes around 95 days from planting to harvest.
Cultural uses and references
Watermelons are used in many parts of the world as symbols and during various celebrations.- Art related to the Mexican holiday Dia de los Muertos commonly depicts watermelons being eaten by the dead or shown in close conjunction with the dead. This theme appears regularly on ceramics and in other art from the holiday. Watermelons also appear as a subject in Mexican still life art.
- In the 19th and early 20th centuries, African Americans often were depicted in racist caricatures as being inordinately fond of watermelon.
- The same depiction of the African American people's fondness of watermelon is used in some eastern states in Mexico. However, it's not considered racist due to the great African heritage of the people from those areas.
- The fruit is extremely popular in the southern United States and has also led to self-parody in the annual watermelon seed-spitting contests of Georgia's Redneck Games.
- Country music singer Tracy Byrd released a single called "Watermelon Crawl", a song about a dance at a fictional watermelon festival.
- A carved watermelon is worn as a hat by fans of the CFL's Saskatchewan Roughriders in imitation of the players' helmets as a symbol of their 'Rider Pride' due the team's official colors of green, white, black, and silver.
- R. Lee Ermey often uses watermelons as targets during his weapons demonstrations on his television show Mail Call.
- Country music singer Tom T. Hall had a number one hit in 1973 entitled "Old Dogs, Children and Watermelon Wine."
- In political usage particularly in Australia, the term 'watermelon' is often a label applied to environmental political groups implying that they're "green on the outside but red on the inside".
See also
commons Watermelon- List of fruits
- Vampire pumpkins and watermelons
- Watermelon stomach
- Gallagher, a prop comic whose most famous bit involves smashing watermelons
Notes
References
- United States Watermelon Speed Eating and Seed Spitting Championships held during Pardeeville Watermelon Festival in Chandler Park, Pardeeville, WI, USA, first Saturday after Labor Day. -M
- Blomberg, Marina (June 10, 2004). "In Season: Savory Summer Fruits." The Gainesville Sun. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- "An African Native of World Popularity." Texas A&M University Aggie Horticulture website. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- Blomberg, Marina (June 10, 2004). "In Season: Savory Summer Fruits." The Gainesville Sun. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- "Charles Fredric Andrus: Watermelon Breeder." Cucurbit Breeding Horticultural Science. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- "Crop Production: Icebox Watermelons." Washington State University Vancouver Research and Extension Unit website. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- Hamish, Robertson. "Citrullus lanatus (Watermelon, Tsamma)." Museums Online South Africa. Retrieved Mar. 15, 2005.
- Motes, J.E.; Damicone, John; Roberts, Warren; Duthie, Jim; Edelson, Jonathan. "Watermelon Production." Oklahoma Cooperative Extension Service. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- Parsons, Jerry, Ph.D. (June 5, 2002). "Gardening Column: Watermelons." Texas Cooperative Extension of the Texas A&M University System. Jul. 17, 2005.
- "Redneck Olympics." ISKRA television. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- Shosteck, Robert (1974). Flowers and Plants: An International Lexicon with Biographical Notes. Quadrangle/The New York Times Book Co.: New York.
- "Watermelon." The George Mateljan Foundation for The World's Healthiest Foods. Retrieved Jul. 28, 2005.
- "Watermelon Production and Consumption Demographics."
- "Watermelon History." National Watermelon Promotion Board website. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
- Wolford, Ron and Banks, Drusilla. "Watch Your Garden Grow: Watermelon." University of Illinois Extension. Retrieved Jul. 17, 2005.
watermelon in Arabic: بطيخ أحمر
watermelon in Guarani: Sándia
watermelon in Azerbaijani: Qarpız
watermelon in Indonesian: Semangka
watermelon in Bengali: তরমুজ
watermelon in Min Nan: Si-koe
watermelon in Bosnian: Lubenica
watermelon in Bulgarian: Диня
watermelon in Catalan: Síndria
watermelon in Danish: Vandmelon
watermelon in Pennsylvania German:
Wassmeloon
watermelon in German: Wassermelone
watermelon in Dhivehi: ކަރާ
watermelon in Estonian: Arbuus
watermelon in Modern Greek (1453-):
Καρπούζι
watermelon in Spanish: Citrullus lanatus
watermelon in Esperanto: Akvomelono
watermelon in Persian: هندوانه
watermelon in French: Pastèque
watermelon in Korean: 수박
watermelon in Hindi: तरबूज
watermelon in Croatian: Lubenica
watermelon in Upper Sorbian: Wódna melona
watermelon in Italian: Citrullus lanatus
watermelon in Hebrew: אבטיח
watermelon in Georgian: საზამთრო
watermelon in Kazakh: Қарбыз
watermelon in Haitian: Melon dlo
watermelon in Latin: Citrullus lanatus
watermelon in Lithuanian: Tikrasis arbūzas
watermelon in Hungarian: Görögdinnye
watermelon in Malayalam: തണ്ണീര് മത്തന്
watermelon in Marathi: टरबूज
watermelon in Malay (macrolanguage): Pokok
Tembikai
watermelon in Dutch: Watermeloen
watermelon in Japanese: スイカ
watermelon in Norwegian: Vannmelon
watermelon in Polish: Kawon
watermelon in Portuguese: Melancia
watermelon in Russian: Арбуз обыкновенный
watermelon in Northern Sami: Čáhcemelovdna
watermelon in Sicilian: Muluni d'acqua
watermelon in Simple English: Watermelon
watermelon in Slovenian: Lubenica
watermelon in Serbian: Лубеница
watermelon in Serbo-Croatian: Lubenica
watermelon in Finnish: Vesimeloni
watermelon in Swedish: Vattenmelon
watermelon in Telugu: పుచ్చ
watermelon in Vietnamese: Dưa hấu
watermelon in Tonga (Tonga Islands):
Meleni
watermelon in Cherokee: ᎬᎩᏍᏗ
watermelon in Turkish: Karpuz
watermelon in Ukrainian: Кавун
watermelon in Yiddish: מעלאנע
watermelon in Chinese:
西瓜