(-)-Norushinsunine
Molecular structure
Sensory signature
How this molecule tastes and smells · gold is measured, dashed is a model estimate
Foods containing this compound
Custard apple, is a common name for a fruit, and the tree which bears it, Annona reticulata Custard apple may also refer to similar fruits produced by related trees: Annonaceae, the custard apple or soursop family. Annona cherimola, a tree and fruit also called cherimoya. Annona squamosa, a tree and fruit also called sugar apple or sweetsop Annona senegalensis, a tree and fruit called wild custard-apple Casimiroa edulis, also called white sapote, a fruit related to the citrus.
The cherimoya, also spelled chirimoya, is the fruit of the species Annona cherimola, which generally is thought to be native to the Andes, although an alternative hypothesis proposes Central America as the origin of cherimoya because many of its wild relatives occur in this area. Today cherimoya is grown throughout South Asia, Central America, South America, Southern California and southern Andalucia [La Axarquia].

Sugar-apple is the fruit of Annona squamosa, the most widely grown species of Annona and a native of the tropical Americas and West Indies.
Verified Data
Compound identity and culinary context are continuously cross-referenced across open scientific databases and maintained by Foodgeist's enrichment pipeline.
The Geist can be wrong. Some flavor, taste, and pairing values are model-predicted, not lab-measured.

