Hi all,
I thought I would share my experiences with the curry tree and plant
Here is my curry plant (Helichrysum italicum)
These are fairly cheap from a nursery but are pretty useless for cooking etc.
They have a great strong aroma of curry powder and make a good pest deterrent/companion plant but thats about it...
Here is my curry tree (Murraya koengii)
This is the one used in various dishes from Indian, south east Asian and pacific cuisines.
I bought it from my nursery but they struggle to find them regularly (I'm in a rural area)
Although quite pricey I'm very happy with it and LOVE the plants aroma and awesome flavoured leaves when used in my Indian style curries.
Its the end of summer here and it grew at least 40cm over the last 2 months!!!
Now for the bit that may help some of you...
I decided I would like to have at least two curry trees just in case one dies etc... So instead of buying another I researched propagating them.
Here is my experience...
The curry tree comes out with bunches of small white 4 petal flowers with a pungent aroma that attracts ants almost better that sugar.
After pollination and they die off they begin to form little pods, these are the curry tree seeds!
Here is a pic of my second round of seeds
As the seeds grow to full size berries (around 10mm around) they begin to ripen.
They slowly turn a deep black colour when ripe and become soft.
At this stage the seeds can be harvested and used to propagate more trees.
Pick the black berry when ripe, remove the outer black flesh so you have a large green seed with a white membrane.
Carefully peel off the thin white membrane until you are left with a large green seed.
From here soak it for a couple of hours in water and propagate immediately as per chilli seed germination.
Here is my seedling that germinated from my first round of seeds
From my research please be aware of the following...
Try to use the seeds as soon as possible as supposedly the germination rate drops off dramatically as the seeds age.
My seed germinated in around a week with a constant soil temp of 26'c, they are known to take up to a few weeks before signs of life.
The tree is considered a weed in some areas as birds like the black seeds and can spread them far and wide. To avoid curry trees taking over your neighbourhood just cut off the bunches of flowers or seeds before ripe.
Hopefully what I have posted may help at least one of you when trying to find/grow a curry tree.
I make my curries from scratch with chillies I grow and love using those fresh leaves!!
Happy cooking,
Mudsta