Tuco
Summer
8 items in season
Cucumber Mini
Lemon Korkoshi
Potato Egyptian
Garlic Green
Lemon Sweet
Banana Plantain
Pepper Italian Green
Watermelon YamaniSeasonal reading

Baladi, Omani, cherry, vine, mountain, zahriye — a field guide to Lebanon's tomato varieties and which one to buy for salad, cooking, grilling, or snacking.

Lebanon's autumn rumman, demystified: a two-minute deseeding trick, what to do with the arils, and why pomegranate molasses is a pillar of the cuisine.

Wrinkled means ripe. Passion fruit hides intense tart-sweet, floral pulp behind an ugly shell — here's how to choose it, scoop it, and use it in drinks, dressings, and desserts.

Late summer brings the Egyptian mango — Aweis, Zebda, Fons — smaller, denser, and far more perfumed than year-round imports. How to tell them apart and pick a ripe one.

Fresh artichokes look intimidating and taste incredible. Here's how to trim, cook, and choose Lebanon's baladi ardi shawki — plus why the spring window is short.

Deep, even color and a dusty bloom on the blueberries. A domed, unbroken shape on the raspberries. Here's how to buy well and keep both fresh.

A pear-shaped tropical fruit with vibrant orange flesh and black peppery seeds — papaya is on Lebanese shelves year-round, but peaks October through February. When to buy, how to spot a ripe one, and what to do with the seeds you'd otherwise throw out.

A spiny green tropical fruit with creamy white pulp and black seeds — soursop (graviola, غرافيولا) appears in Lebanese shelves from November through March. What it actually tastes like, how to open one, and why the cancer-cure claim doesn't hold up.

Janerik — Lebanon's unripe green plums — last only a few weeks in spring. Here's why they're worth dropping everything for.

Tart, golden, and wrapped in a papery husk — aguaymanto is the Andean berry that Frutzco is bringing to Lebanese tables for the first time.

A deep dive into akkoub, Lebanon's most prized wild spring herb — its flavor, tradition, and why foragers risk thorns for it.