• runswithjedi@lemmy.world
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    8 个月前

    This is complete bullshit. There is no way to pick a “perfect” watermelon just by looking at it. You HAVE to cut it open and taste it.

    Source: I used to cut fruit at a grocery store. I’ve literally cut thousands of watermelon and there is no pattern. Some are good, some are mediocre, some are terrible.

    • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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      8 个月前

      I’ve tried the cut and taste method. It works but it gets you thrown out of a lot of supermarkets.

      • runswithjedi@lemmy.world
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        8 个月前

        At the place I worked at, we let anyone request a sample of something. I would slice the watermelon in half, let them try a bit, and shrink-wrap it if they liked it. I sold a lot of watermelon that way! Ask an employee and they might do that for you. If the customer didn’t want it, we just used it for samples or fruit cups, so there wasn’t any waste.

        • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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          8 个月前

          They’re usually OK with the first one, it’s when you sample 6 or 7 to find the best one that they start getting all uptight.

    • weatherman@midwest.social
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      8 个月前

      You’re absolutely right. Cut thousands of watermelon for a grocery store and tested all the theories about how to pick a perfect one, none of them hold true. Also loved watching people tap on them like they’re watermelon whisperers lol

      • rustydomino@lemmy.world
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        8 个月前

        The watermelon smacking doesn’t get you any information on taste, true. But it does give you an idea of how crisp it is, which affects texture. The crisp watermelons are bouncy when you smack them, and the spongy ones absorb the smack.

    • JDubbleu@programming.dev
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      8 个月前

      The best way I’ve found, which works like 90% of the time, is to knock on it while holding it. It should sound somewhat hollow, but not empty. Too hollow means it’s not juicy and not hollow enough means it’s under ripe. Tells you nothing about flavor, but it at least allows you to pick one that is decently juicy and ripe. It’s all relative but if you knock on a few you’ll quickly find one that sounds in the middle. Pick that one and you’ll have at least a decent watermelon.

  • Steamymoomilk@sh.itjust.works
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    8 个月前

    Im not gonna lie i thought this was gonna be a shitpost. Where one of them was gonna be “shiny metal and held up by a screw driver”

  • Infynis@midwest.social
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    8 个月前

    If you get one that has larger “webbing”, and is also heavy, and a uniform size, will it be too sweet?

    • runswithjedi@lemmy.world
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      8 个月前

      The chart is self-contradictory. A watermelon could have any combination of these attributes and it doesn’t impact flavor.

  • No_@lemm.ee
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    8 个月前

    This is like those “how to survive a quicksand pit” guides. No one who needs to know this information will learn it from here.

    • Infynis@midwest.social
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      8 个月前

      I think buying a watermelon is a much more common situation than falling into quicksand

      • No_@lemm.ee
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        8 个月前

        And which part of this has to do with the likelihood of doing either one?

        Ever heard of Bayes’ theorem? Maybe read up on that first.