It is sometimes called custard-apple because the flesh resembles soft custard.
2
The taste is sweet, and the fruit is wholesome: it is full of seeds, like the custard-apple.
3
When the scuffle you heave a ripe custard-apple at them, and it bursts in a lather of cream.
4
Garman stood leaning against the custard-apple tree which had hidden his approach and looked at Payne and Annette as he spoke.
5
The custard-apple (as we call it) is a fruit as big as a pomegranate, and much of the same colour.
6
The custard-apple trees ran to fifteen feet in height and twelve inches in diameter, but between their trunks was plenty of room for passage.
7
They have beans, carrots, turnips, cabbages, and a little maize; pineapples, fig trees, custard-apples, and oranges; lemons, and cocoanuts.
8
Here are also hog-plums, custard-apples, soursops, cashews, papaws (called here mamoons) jennipahs (called here jennipapahs) manchineel-apples and mangoes.
9
Their chief fruits are (besides plantains in abundance) oranges, lemons, citrons, melons (both musk and watermelons) limes, guavas, pomegranates, quinces, custard-apples, and papaws, etc.
10
Such cartloads and piles of bananas and pine-apples, such heaps of custard-apples and "bullocks' hearts," such a wealth of gold and green giving off fragrance!