My Top 10 Best Tasting Fig Varieties

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 28

  • @babichevi7950
    @babichevi7950 Před 3 lety +3

    In one of your videos you talked about what you would do if you started all over and said you would not collect so many varieties but would focus on propagating the ones that are your best. I would say that it’s probably taken all these years of trying all these varieties to find out what figs perform well and are really tasty.
    You do a great service for us who live in a similar climate by sharing this vast experience so we don’t have to grow 140 different varieties to figure out which we like the best! We don’t all have the ability to grow so many figs. It’s helpful to get ideas of what might be best for us. The local nurseries are, for most of us, not a great source. What they carry, IF they have figs, is seriously limited and not necessarily a good variety. If we go online, there’s such a dizzying array of choices, it’s impossible to know what to choose.
    I like the idea you put forth in another video of choosing figs from different flavor profiles. By giving us an idea of what varieties fit into those profiles, we can do that. We can also choose varieties that will fit our climate.
    You provide such a wealth of information for us. Are you making videos every day? It almost seems like it. They are all excellent. You are a fig missionary!
    I’m excited to be embarking on my own fig journey. I did not expect to be acquiring several varieties but I bought a little Celeste from a local woman who loves propagating plants. And then I got some cuttings of HC, VdB, and LSU purple because they were not expensive. And I decided it’s okay for me to get a few varieties because how else will I know what does well for me and what I like? I’m retirement age, I don’t want to waste a lot of time finding out what are the best figs for me!
    My only complaint is that some of these are not available to us but enough of them are that I should not complain.
    Thanks again.

  • @jessicabender1301
    @jessicabender1301 Před rokem

    I like that you sort based on flavor alone, other videos for your climate, etc. very helpful

  • @skylerjoaquin8666
    @skylerjoaquin8666 Před 3 lety +4

    Ross you are converting me to becoming a fig geek. Love learning from your videos. I am buying fig cuttings, but they are expensive!

    • @babichevi7950
      @babichevi7950 Před 3 lety +2

      I know. I want them all! Or at least I want to taste them all and find the ones I like the best. There’s an old Bulgarian guy who has 14 varieties of figs who sells them at a local farmer’s market. Unfortunately, I met him two weeks before the end of the market. I’ll make a point of looking for him next year.

  • @thomacapo1892
    @thomacapo1892 Před rokem +1

    I am Albanian, we grew up with figs. I managed to grow a turkey brown from a brach in Philly(outside), which took three years to fruit. Spoilage, birds, make it quite impossible to enjoy as soon as they start ripening it rains.I am a fanatic for figs I just bought a home with land in Huntingdon Valley I want to plant every variety you mentioned please help me man if you can spare branches I will pot them myself if you want to get paid.

  • @thegrandmaster2517
    @thegrandmaster2517 Před rokem +1

    Violet de Bordeaux nr 1

  • @sebastianvulcu4736
    @sebastianvulcu4736 Před 3 lety +6

    Hello, Ross! About hative d’argenteuil, I have talked about it with some french growers and none of them knew about any fig with that name grown in France, and said that it’s actually a name that some other french fig got when it reached the US, and pointed out that it may be the same as Eaubonne or blue celeste. Whats your thought on that? It would be helpful for me to find out any synonim to then be able to localise it in french nurseries. Thanks!

    • @RossRaddi
      @RossRaddi  Před 3 lety +3

      There are no synonyms for this fig. It's like no other I've seen.

    • @habibnadia972
      @habibnadia972 Před 3 lety +1

      We have Violette Dauphine in France, which have Hâtive, and Argenteuil in its different synonyms. Two crops, one of my favourite for the complexity and richness of its taste (2nd crop).

    • @RossRaddi
      @RossRaddi  Před 3 lety +1

      @@habibnadia972 Thanks for the reply, Nadia. Could you point me towards some photos of Violette Dauphine? The few we have here in the US are similar to Violette de Sollies.

  • @NaniTreas1
    @NaniTreas1 Před 3 lety +1

    If you didn't get many Black Madeira figs, it's probably because you didn't have the wasp. Even varieties of figs that don't require the wasp to produce mature fruit will still do better if the wasp is present.

  • @Chris-bx4vk
    @Chris-bx4vk Před 3 lety +4

    Very off brand/topic here, but I'm curious what the normal folks like yourself are thinking of the riots going on right now in Philly? News blowing it out of proportion or is it legitimately concerning?
    Also thanks for all the fig education I've learned a ton over the past year! No channel I've found comes close to yours in terms of experience with the fruit.

    • @RossRaddi
      @RossRaddi  Před 3 lety +15

      Unfortunately Philly has a strong history of destroying its city. When good things happen or when bad things happen. A client of ours by city hall, got his store destroyed the last time there were riots. It's not cool and these people doing damage and looting should be arrested. I'm sure any normal person would agree.

    • @tomsmith2215
      @tomsmith2215 Před 3 lety +4

      @@RossRaddi fn right brother. its a shame. kim kasick 2020. baltimore and philly ought to be ashamed while the politicians got loaded. gutter fs

    • @yenlam8408
      @yenlam8408 Před 3 lety +3

      @@RossRaddi 100% agree with you. Each looter should get at least five new calendar and learn how to behave in Federal hotel.

    • @antsgun
      @antsgun Před 3 lety

      When I drive thru philly I count the sheets of plywood on storefronts. It not a nice place to be right now.

    • @tomsmith2215
      @tomsmith2215 Před 3 lety

      @@antsgunlol id say...for a decade or two. Been ignored while they praised the do nothing politicians getting rich. Great job Jon Lewis. Not

  • @MyDogMike1
    @MyDogMike1 Před 3 lety +1

    Where did you source your Verdino del Nord? I’m wondering if there’s more than one “version” of this one floating around the community.

    • @RossRaddi
      @RossRaddi  Před 3 lety +2

      There are two different figs with the same name. One from vladimiro Rocco the other from Tatiana. Be careful of your source.

    • @MyDogMike1
      @MyDogMike1 Před 3 lety

      I ask because Big Bill has his listed as a honey fig...surely that isn’t the same as what you’ve got.

    • @RossRaddi
      @RossRaddi  Před 3 lety +3

      @@MyDogMike1 None of the VdN figs are honey figs. They're both green with a red berry interior.

    • @MyDogMike1
      @MyDogMike1 Před 3 lety

      Thanks.

    • @MyDogMike1
      @MyDogMike1 Před 3 lety

      @@RossRaddi so which one is in your video?
      Nevermind, got my answer.

  • @sampsuns
    @sampsuns Před 2 lety

    If I want to grow a compact size fig < 5ft and taste good. I am in north California 9b. Which variety should I choose?

    • @yummytummy88
      @yummytummy88 Před měsícem

      Most fig are small in size if you pot them. Taste is subjective but most love the taste of berry in their fig. Like Ross said, Black Maderia and Italian-258 are a handful of good fig. Central and southern California are one of a few great locations to grow figs with it longer season with dry hot climate

  • @connorwestgate
    @connorwestgate Před 3 lety +1

    have you tried de la roca in ground in zone 7?

    • @RossRaddi
      @RossRaddi  Před 3 lety

      Yes. You need season extension.

  • @valentingromov9227
    @valentingromov9227 Před rokem +1

    He could have said the main thing in three minutes, but turned this topic into 33 minutes of empty conversation. This is terrible