Naples Greenola

We are an organic Co-Op located in Naples, Florida. Feeding families organically since 2009.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

What is in the Co-Op bins this week 7/14/2011

I took a picture of the bins today, but for some reason it is not showing up... and I did not get a bin today due to a clerical error!! So here is the list:

Extras for this week...
1. Applegate Hot Dogs $3.50 or 2/ $7.00 --that's a good deal!!--
2. Tribe Classic Hummus $2.50 or 2 for $4.00 --what a sale!!--
3. Murray's Whole Chickens 3.5 - 4 pounds $10.00 or 2 for $19.00
4. Organic, Fair Trade Coffee $7.00
5. Fresh Baked Goods from Kym:
    --These will be individually marked-- 
7. Organic Strawberries $3.75/pound

Now for what will be in your bins this week...
CHOICE: Kale OR Butter Lettuce, Both Organic --in cooler--
Red Onions Organic
Cucumbers, Organic
Mushrooms, Crimini, Organic
Nectarines Organic
Peaches, Organic
Pluots, Organic
Bananas Organic

$25 Only...
Celery, Hearts,Organic
Lychee, , Organic  --information below--


Lychee Description - What is a lychee?

By Bill Mee & Krystal Folino
A lychee is a rare sub tropical fruit originating in South China where the lychee is very important in their culture and is famed as "the King of Fruits".
The lychee fruit is about 1½ to 2 inches in size, oval to rounded heart shaped and the bumpy skin is red in color. Once you peel the skin off, the crisp juicy flesh of a lychee fruit is white or pinkish, translucent and glossy like the consistency of a grape, but the taste is sweeter. Lychees have a sub acid sweet taste and have a wonderful freshness to them that is hard to describe. Lychee fruit is high in the antioxidant Vitamin C and the essential mineral Potassium.
Lychee trees are beautiful hardwoods that can grow 20 to 40 feet tall in a primarily dome shaped habit of growth with dense, evergreen leaves. Lychee trees are popular landscape trees in South Florida and other areas of the southern U.S. and container, atrium or greenhouse growing of lychee trees is becoming popular throughout the rest of he country.
Lychee trees are grown commercially in the US for the highly sought after fruit in primarily South and Coastal Central Florida where it is warm and there is some winter chilling, but little or no risk of hard freezes.