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Anonymous
>> Anonymous
Quit playing with your food!
>> Anonymous
I am rendered completely speechless by this fruitful act...
>> Anonymous
venereal seeds
>> Anonymous
Banana with the peel on= safe sex
>> Anonymous
Do bananas and cantaloupes taste any good together? I like both but I've never tried them in the same dish.
>> Anonymous
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Cantaloupes aren't actually cantaloupes! The average melon you see in the store that we label as a cantaloupe is actually called a Muskmelon! True cantaloupes are only found in France, which they hardly ever import to America.
>> Anonymous
>>316316
fruit salad
>> Anonymous
>>316319
I can't believe someone else knows this. I've told people this and they just stare at me.
>> Anonymous
>>316319
This is true! My grandfather grows them!!!!!
<3 musk melons
>> Anonymous
>>316319
cantaloupes are a variety of muskmelon
>> Anonymous
>>316319
You just blew my fucking mind.

Why the fuck don't they call it what it is? People have eaten stranger-named things than muskmelon.
>> Anonymous
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>>317699
cantaloupes are muskmelons
>> Anonymous
>>316319
>>316520
i saw it on Good Eats
>>317725
nice pic, but you're WRONG
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muskmelons
Muskmelon (Cucumis melo) is a species of melon that has been developed into many cultivated varieties. These include smooth skinned varietes, such as honeydew, and different netted cultivars known as cantaloupes (some of which, confusingly, may be particularly identified as "muskmelon"). The large number of cultivars in this species approaches that found in wild cabbage, though morphological variation is not as extensive. It is an accessory fruit of a type that botanists call an epigynous berry. Muskmelon is native to northwestern India from where it spread to China and Europe.[1] The varied cultivars produced have been divided into multiple cultivar groups.
>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantaloupes
Cantaloupe (also cantaloup) refers to two varieties of muskmelon (Cucumis melo) [1], which is a species in the family Cucurbitaceae (a family which includes nearly all melons and squashes). Cantaloupes are typically 15–25 cm in length and are somewhat oblong, though not as oblong as watermelons. Like all melons, cantaloupes grow best in sandy, well-aerated, well-watered soil that is free of encroaching weeds.
>> Anonymous
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>>317735