Cantaloupe
The cantaloupe is a type of true melon with sweet, aromatic, and usually orange flesh. Originally, cantaloup referred to the true cantaloupe or European cantaloupe with non- to slightly netted and often ribbed rind. Today, it also refers to the muskmelon with strongly netted rind, which is called cantaloupe in North America, rockmelon in Australia and New Zealand, and spanspek in Southern Africa. Cantaloupes range in mass from.
Etymology
The name cantaloupe derived from the French and Italian languages in relation to Cantalupo, the name of a summer estate of the Vatican near Rome where melons were first grown in the 18th century. The name was first used in English in 1739.History
The cantaloupe may have originated in a region from South Asia to Africa, although its exact origin is unknown. According to one source, "cantaloupes were cultivated in Egypt and migrated across to Iran and Northwest India dating as far back to Biblical times, about 2400 BC."Types
The true or European cantaloupe, which has non- to slightly netted rind and orange flesh, includes the following types:- Subgroup Prescott with deeply ribbed rind, such as 'Prescott Fond Blanc'.
- Subgroup Saccharinu with speckled and slightly ribbed rind, such as 'Sucrin de Honfleur'
- Subgroup Charentais with non-speckled, slightly ribbed and green-sutured rind.
The muskmelon or American cantaloupe, which has strongly netted rind and orange flesh, includes the following types:
- Subgroup American Western with non- to slightly ribbed and wholly netted rind.
- Subgroup American Eastern with more or less ribbed rind of which the sutures are not or less netted.
Similar types
A melon with netted rind is not necessarily a cantaloupe. Many varieties of Chandalak group and Ameri group also have netted rind.The Japanese muskmelon resembles the American cantaloupe in netted rind, but differs in green flesh and non-dehiscent peduncles. Therefore, some horticulturists classify the Japanese muskmelon under Inodorus group instead of Cantalupensis or Reticulatus group.
Production
In 2023, world production of cantaloupes was 29.5 million tonnes, led by China with 49% of the total.Uses
Culinary
Cantaloupe is normally eaten as a fresh fruit, as a salad, or as a dessert with ice cream or custard. Melon pieces wrapped in prosciutto are a familiar antipasto. The seeds are edible and may be dried for use as a snack.Because the surface of a cantaloupe can contain harmful bacteria—in particular, Salmonella—it is recommended that a melon be washed and scrubbed thoroughly before cutting and consumption to prevent risk of Salmonella or other bacterial pathogens.
A moldy cantaloupe in a Peoria, Illinois, market in 1943 was found to contain the highest yielding strain of mold for penicillin production, after a worldwide search.