[Neutered Fruit] Apple
Written by MississippiStyleVanillaSweetcheeks on April 27th, 2009 · 50 viewsWhen reviewing food for as discerning an audience as Foodenator’s, it is very important to correctly identify and correlate the actual food with the review being written. As a Foodenator critic, I would not want to write a review for Cousin Franco’s new lunch bistro while eating a sandwich purchased at SubGiant. It wouldn’t be fair to Cousin Franco or to Aunt Bottomtooth. In this case, I can’t even tell you what kind of apple this is. Gala? McIntosh? Hard to tell. So I am not going to review this apple. Instead I am going to draw all of you Foodenators into a vicious debate on the merits of neutering fruit.

This apple was carefully and deliciously dissected by underpaid Foodenator lab techs. No seeds were found. We looked on the outside, like you would find on a strawberry. No dice. No seeds either. We dove deeper, below the skin if you will. By the time we reached the core, morale has high. Surely we would spot seeds or seedsign. Our lead food engineer postulated the existence of “dark anti-seeds” that could indicate the location of the elusive seeds. But even analysis by gas chromatograph and magnifying glass could not locate any sexual organs whatsoever on this fruit. Obviously this fruit had been neutered at some point. The investigation continues… stay tuned.
Apple: ******** 8 (out of 10)
Neutered Fruit: * 1 (out of 10)
8 Comments »
I think you have a non-sexual genically engineered apple. In other words, grown in a test tube. I think the debate should be whether or not an apple’s identity should be cloned and modified in a science lab.
hahhaha wnat to chat? i like melons!
Yes, that is what I was afraid of. I still have not managed to track down a paper trail of this apple’s medical history, but I think oneOh is right when he says we could be dealing with a vegetable. But the question remains, with world fruit supplies threatened by genetical monkey-agri-business concerns, who is going to watch the watchmen?
So, the neutered apple would be in the same vein as say a carrot? In a sense that makes sense.
Cross-pollinating a veg and fruit to create the hybrid fruigetables could sound a little odd to those who are used to standard foods
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April 27, 2009 @ 4:42 pm
so, what your saying is… this was a seedless apple? Would that be a vegetable?