Dewberries are a delicacy

Photo: Arne Ader
Translation: Liis
 
Dewberry.

     Dewberry
Põldmurakas 
 Rubus caesius    
 
Raspberries grow like bushes with their erect canes, whereas dewberries – with fruits of a similar shape but not colour – growing in open spaces have shoots spreading on the ground. The stems and leaf stalks have prickly spines. In the shadowy undergrowth of forests the dewberry grows as a bush and it has much fewer spines – thus much depends on the location.
 
The dewberry fruits, aggregates of drupelets, are larger than those of the raspberry, the seed in each individual drupelet is larger too, and the taste is somewhat acid. Home-made jam or marmalade from the ripe, purplish-black fruits is a delicacy – but tastes differ.
 

Calcareous soils suit the dewberry well, and in the humid parts of fields and at stone walls in Läänemaa it can be a nuisance weed.



 

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