MiamiFruit

MiamiFruit

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This is where you can buy some of the best exotic fruits in the world!

We hand select the highest quality and rarest varieties of tropical fruit to deliver to your door.

06/18/2026

99% of the mangoes in US supermarkets today are imported from South America and the Caribbean.

Florida’s commercial mango production was largely decimated by urbanization and devastating hurricanes—particularly Hurricane Andrew in 1992.

While commercial farming shifted to the tropics, South Florida remains a treasure trove of backyard mango varieties collected from all over the world and selectively bred for the highest quality texture and flavor.

You can order the mango mix box online at miamifruit.org 🌈

06/18/2026

Mango mix box available at miamifruit.org 🌈

06/18/2026

Have you tried rambutan? ❤️ This interesting-looking fruit is in the Sapindaceae (aka soapberry) family- the same as lychee, longan, and mamoncillo. 🍒

The flavor is sweet, and it’s juicy. It’s kind of like a grape but more firm. 🤤

Rambutan is native to Southeast Asia, specifically the Malaysian−Indonesian region. 🌏

It’s ready to eat as soon as it is picked. We recommend eating or refrigerating as soon as you receive them. 😋

➡️ miamifruit.org 🌈

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Photos from MiamiFruit's post 06/08/2026

Mangoes make Miami summers worth it ☀️🥵🥭 You can order order a mango mix box at miamifruit.org 🌈

06/03/2026

Wampi season is peaking 💛 you can order a box at miamifruit.org 🌈

06/03/2026

Canistel aka eggfruit is available at miamifruit.org 🌈

When ripe it will be soft all over and tastes kind of like cheesecake 🍰

05/29/2026

Nam Doc Mai mango season just started! 🥭 You can order a box online at Miamifruit.org and we will ship it to your door 🚪

05/29/2026

Lychee season is starting in South Florida 🍒 Secure your pre-order at miamifruit.org 🌈

Photos from MiamiFruit's post 05/22/2026

Hua Moa Bananas originated in Polynesia and were spread throughout the South Pacific Islands on canoes by indigenous islanders. They arrived in Hawaii around 1,000–1,200 AD.

In 1960, the Miami-based fruit explorer William F. Whitman brought Hua Moas to Miami and distributed plants to other local rare fruit enthusiasts.

The climate of South Florida is one of the few places in the contiguous United States where tropical fruits can thrive.

They were then planted commercially by Cuban farmers who began calling it ‘Hawaiiyano’ in the Homestead, Florida area.

Hua Moa bananas became so popular that Hispanic grocery stores in Miami started carrying this fruit on their shelves.

Since peaking in the 1990s, production in Florida has fallen substantially, as a result of pests, disease, hurricane damage, cost of land, labor, and fertilizer rising, and urban development.

A small amount of local fruit enthusiasts continue to grow Hua Moa bananas in South Florida today and their popularity is slowly increasing again from online exposure.

If you’d like to order a box of Hua Moa bananas online you can order them from miamifruit.org 🌈

05/22/2026

Caviar Lime ASMR ✳️ What’s your favorite way to eat this fruit? I love putting it on top of avocado toast 🥑

Each pearl is a little sack of lime juice that bursts when you bite it. 😋

asmr foodasmr satisfying citrus

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