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Artichoke47
Oct 14th, 2005, 10:26 PM
If you buy a cantelope from the store and let it sit for a while at room temperature, does it ripen more? Or is it already at its full ripeness?

abrennan
Oct 14th, 2005, 11:27 PM
I have read that they do not ripen any further after they have been picked. They get softer and juicier at room temperature but not riper, so if they are not very sweet they will not get sweeter. This is because they have no starch reserves to convert to sugar over time after they have been picked. I always smell them and when I find a nice lovley smelling one I buy it.

http://www.hormel.com/images/glossary/c/cantaloupe.jpg


Here in Australia we call them melons. The one in the picture is a rockmelon. I have read that they are called Cantelope because were first cultivated near Cantalupo in Italy, in the mid-18th century.

Antonymelon:)

Artichoke47
Oct 14th, 2005, 11:37 PM
:D

Thanks. I cut into one that wasn't ripe enough and I was letting the second one I bought just sit there. :( I guess that one won't be as good, either. I have since read that you should buy ones with more goldish color as opposed to green, because the green ones aren't ripe enough.

abrennan
Oct 14th, 2005, 11:52 PM
:D

Thanks. I cut into one that wasn't ripe enough and I was letting the second one I bought just sit there. :( I guess that one won't be as good, either. I have since read that you should buy ones with more goldish color as opposed to green, because the green ones aren't ripe enough.

I find the smelling process to work best. Unless they have them cold then you can hardly smell em

antony smell

eve
Oct 15th, 2005, 07:51 AM
I like cantaloup when they are very ripe - so sweet, mmmmm.