Wild Grape - Vitaceae Ampelocissus acetosa

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Family: Vitaceae

Genus: Ampelocissus

Species: acetosa

Eatable Part: Fleshy Fruit

Height: 1 Meter

Habitat: 0W and MW

Habit: Climber/Shrud

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Distribution:

NT, WA, QLD

Description

This vine shoots up as the wet season starts and is commonly found not only in the Darwin region but across a few parts of northern Australia, including Cape York. Now don’t get too excited it is not a really fat grape like the commercially grown wine varieties, but it is a wonderful plant that is often prolific in areas of our Savannah woodland that has small edible juicy grape fruit that is ripe from Feb- April and yes it really is a grape cousin, in the grape family (Vitaceae). It has many indignous names and is still eaten, but doens't seem to be a favourite.

Tasting Notes

I have been advised that you should not eat the skin, although I have and it seems fine (I am still alive and nothing odd happened, but you know everyone is different!). The fruit grows in bunches and ripens from green to black and has a juicy sweet taste, with a little hot or bitter after taste but is perfectly harmless. I have read that Jawoyn people rubbed the fruit first in sand to get rid of the cheeky after taste; I did not try this but I presume you then brush off the sand to avoid a gritty crust! The little grapes each have about three seeds in.

Growing at Home

As a wet season annual this is not known to be propagated.

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Kapok - Bixaceae Cochlospermum fraseri

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Small Bush Potato - Apocynaceae Brachystelma glabriflorum