How Many Calories In A Pear

By Arold Augustin


The popular fruit, the pear, is in the same botanical family as the rose, in the genus Pyrus. A surprising fact at first but it does make sense, considering their pleasing flowery aroma. The flowers of the fruit are most commonly white, although pink or yellow blossoms appear in some varieties. A typical specimen weighing 170 grams and there are approximately 100 calories in a pear.

According to the Pear Bureau, pears are one of the most popular fruits in the world. An excellent source of fiber and a good source of Vitamin C, pears are free from sodium, fat and cholesterol. More than 3,000 different varieties of this blissful fruit are grown around the world. Each one has its own distinctive character, flavor and texture.

While they make an excellent snack or an addition to a packed lunch, there are many interesting recipes involving fruits of the Pyrus genus. Placed in a blender with ice, a large orange, sugar and vanilla soy milk, they make a lovely breakfast smoothie. Slightly more complicated is the lavender mint spritz. This may be served with or without alcohol.

A fermented beverage made from Pyrus fruit is called perry, similar to cider. While some people refer to it as pear cider, this is like nails on a chalkboard to cider purists. By whichever name you choose to call it, perry is growing in popularity year by year, especially in France and the United Kingdom. Bottled perry is available in the United States at manageable strengths that English perry drinkers would laugh at.

Serve in a sandwich with bacon and cheese on sourdough bread. Bosc, Anjou and Bartlett varieties are particularly well-suited to this treatment. Pyrus can also be the basis of a lovely gluten-free, dairy-free bread. Believe it or not, you can also make a pear lasagna, for which the Bosc variety is particularly suitable. Included in one recipe are cardamom and brie. Chorizo and pears make an interesting combination.

The Bartlett Pyrus tree is prized by gardeners because of its pyramidal form, red foliage in the autumn and its white blossoms. Sadly, it is a menace in domestic cultivation and should be avoided. This is because it is very invasive, stinks when there are more than one or two trees and it breaks in high wind because of its weak wood.

The first recorded mention of the fruit in literature occurred in Homer's The Odyssey in the ninth century BC, providing confirmation that the fruit existed at least three thousand years before now. Two thousand years later it gave the notorious accused murderess, Lizzie Borden, a handy alibi when she was tried for killing both her parents with an axe. She testified that during the time period when she was accused of axing her father, she was in the barn partaking of the fruit. This was sufficient to acquit her.

The pear is one of the most popular fruits in the world. Considering the low number of calories in a pear, it makes an excellent snack on its own and may be incorporated in recipes. The fruit has been immortalized in literature for nearly three millennia. While some varieties of fruit tree make attractive garden plants, the Bradford variety in particular is a menace and should be avoided in domestic gardens.




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