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Blood oranges, have they been altered?

(10 Posts)
Lizzies Tue 04-Feb-25 14:42:32

I used to buy blood oranges that were nearly totally red inside and were deliciously tart, just a bit sweeter than lemons, and I loved them. I have kept missing them for the last few years because they are only available for a short time. I bought four from M&S yesterday and I am very disappointed. They are bigger than I remember and the one I had last night was only reddish tinged in places. The flavour was more like an ordinary orange. Have they been modified to be sweeter and less bloody to please more people?

MiniMoon Tue 04-Feb-25 15:12:06

There are three main varieties of blood orange; Moro, Tarocco, and Sanguinello. Moro provides the deepest red flush, while Tarocco tends to produce a a slightly sweeter flavour - they are both native to Italy.

Cold Tue 04-Feb-25 18:22:39

There are different varieties that have slightly different taste.

I think also the degree of redness varies according to temperature - the colder it gets the redder the oranges.

NotAGran55 Tue 04-Feb-25 18:23:48

I bought some Ippolito oranges from Waitrose that were disappointing.
Slight tinges of red, soft skinned, easy to peel,very very juicy but not much flavour.
Style over substance.

Claremont Tue 04-Feb-25 19:50:43

Climate change is affecting all types of citrus fruit. They ripen too early, and there is an awful disease affecting all cittus production in California, moving to other regions too.

Esmay Tue 04-Feb-25 19:56:11

I thought that it was me .
Lots of foods don't taste the same !
It's true - blood oranges don't have that wonderful tang anymore .

Astitchintime Tue 04-Feb-25 20:00:45

I bought blood oranges a couple of weeks ago and they were so disappointing ....... didn't taste anything like I remember from years ago. They were rather soft, as if they were overripe and not particularly red in the flesh despite the peel being very dark.

Claremont Tue 04-Feb-25 20:04:44

The same thing has happened to Clementines- too much sun, too high temps and not enough water, and they become too sweet and lose that 'wonderful tang'. They are trying to grow new species in Corsica, but it takes about 20 years.

Same is happening with grapes for wine all over the world. The Champagne region is getting too warm for Champagne productors. they bought lots of land in Southern England for this purpose but (yep- the truth- so here goes), Brexit has put an end to easy, frictionless exports to EU.

Whingey Wed 05-Feb-25 10:10:30

I liked Ortaniqes. Not seen them in decades

Lizzies Thu 06-Feb-25 21:22:36

Glad it’s not just me.