Kiwis provide vitamins and taste great in a fruit salad.
Only peeling the small fruits is a bit annoying.
It's easy to do with this trick!
Do you love kiwis?
Great, because kiwis are one of those
fruits rich in vitamins and nutrients
that should be added to the menu more often, for example in the form of a fruit salad or in smoothies.
Did you know that with just one large kiwi you can cover your daily vitamin C * requirement?
Ingenious little fruits!
This makes them a valuable helper against colds, especially in the winter months.
But they have one downer: if you don't want to spoon them out of the shell as a snack, but rather
cut them into small
pieces
for the fruit salad
, you should peel them beforehand - and that's really annoying with such small, round fruits.
It's also a good idea to cut off some of the pulp when cutting away the skin.
Too bad!
Especially with very ripe and therefore soft kiwis, peeling with a knife or peeler is difficult.
But with this trick you can make it easier for yourself.
Also read:
Kiwi with or without peel: This is how you should really eat them.
Peeling kiwi fruit: It's child's play with the glass trick
To
peel
a
soft kiwi easily
, you need a knife and a glass.
The size of the glass should match the fruit.
Cut the kiwi in half lengthways.
Loosen the peel a little at the top end of one kiwi half.
Now place the kiwi over the edge of the glass so that the peel is outside and the fruit is inside the glass.
Then carefully pull the kiwi down.
The pulp ends up in the glass.
The jar trick also works with avocados and mangoes.
Just make sure that the
fruits are well ripe and therefore soft
, otherwise it will be difficult.
Also interesting: be
careful: you should never eat these fruits with natural yoghurt.
Video: Also delicious - quick orange dessert
(mad) * Merkur.de is an offer from IPPEN.MEDIA.
Read more:
Beware of mistakes: You should really only buy this fruit when it is ripe.
Foods Everyone's Constantly Confusing: Do You Know the Difference?
Foods Everyone's Constantly Confusing: Do You Know the Difference?
List of rubric lists: © Gemma Ferrando via www.imago-images.de