Luckily, vitamin C-rich citrus fruit are abundant at this time of year. Sneezes and colds are rife and citrus offer a zesty boost to health, providing high levels of vitamin C, potassium, fibre plus folate - also known as folic acid - a B group vitamin important for cell growth
Jan Bilton: Cultivate a zest for citrus
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Citrus fruits full of vitamin C are easy to get your hands on in the flu season.
Limes grow in tropical and subtropical climates. Most New Zealand limes are still imported from the Pacific Islands. However, many of us now grow our own. Lime juice and lime zest is addictive and is a great - and healthy - substitute for salt in dishes. Limes are also an integral ingredient of appetising Asian recipes.
The kaffir lime, common in Thai and Vietnamese cooking, is small with a skin that's yellow-green, knobbly and wrinkled. The flesh is usually dry: it's the rind that is used in cooking plus the glossy, dark green leave, which have a unique double shape and look like two leaves joined end to end.
The kaffir limes I grew in Auckland had dry, pale, useless flesh. The kaffir limes I'm now cultivating in the "top of the south" (sheltered from frosts) are very juicy - and this juice is excellent in dressings and marinades. However, the flesh is still bitter and unusable. I store my surplus crop of fruit in the freezer ready to put extra zest into soups, meatballs and sauces.