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What Is Passion fruit and How Can I Use It?

If passion fruit has turned up in a recipe or caught your eye at the store, here's what you need to use it with confidence and how to choose it, cook it, store it, what to substitute, and 17 recipes to try it in.

Key Points

  • A small tropical fruit you scoop from the shell; seedy pulp is intensely tart and floral.
  • Use it raw or add late; heat drives off the perfume you are paying for.
  • Sieve out the crunchy seeds for silky mousse or curd; leave them in for texture.
  • Wrinkled, dimpled skin means ripe; a smooth taut shell is still underripe.
  • Pairs with cream, mascarpone, white chocolate, mango, and lime; freeze pulp in cubes.

What is passion fruit?

Passion fruit is a small tropical fruit with a hard, round shell and a cavity packed with golden, jelly-coated seeds. You eat the pulp and seeds together, scooped straight from the cut shell with a spoon.

The flavor is intense. It is sharply tart and floral, so aromatic that one ripe fruit can perfume a whole bowl of cream.

The two common types are the purple passion fruit and the larger yellow one, also called granadilla in much of the world. Purple tends to be sweeter and less acidic, while yellow is bigger and tarter.

Either way, you are buying it for its perfume and its acid, which is why a little goes a long way.

How to Use Passion Fruit

Halve the fruit across the middle and scoop the pulp into a bowl. The crunchy black seeds are edible, so most people leave them in for texture and a faint bitterness.

When you want pure silky juice for a mousse or curd, press the pulp through a fine sieve and discard the seeds. Keep a spoonful of seeds aside to stir back in for looks.

That bright pulp carries desserts. It folds into whipped cream for a Passion Fruit Mousse, flavors the sponge and icing of a Granadilla Cake, and spoons over the top of a baked Australian Cheesecake where its tartness cuts the richness.

Blitz it into a Mango Passion Fruit Gelato or a smoothie and the acid wakes up sweeter tropical fruit.

It is just as good raw. Spoon the seedy pulp over yogurt or pavlova, stir it into a fruit salad, or shake the juice into cocktails where it does the work of both citrus and a floral note.

Pairing and Common Mistakes

Passion fruit loves rich, sweet partners that soften its acid: heavy cream, mascarpone, white chocolate, coconut, and meringue. It pairs naturally with mango and pineapple, and with bright friends like lime and orange.

A passionfruit cake leans on this balance, the sweet crumb playing against the tart pulp.

The most common mistake is treating it as merely sour. Heat drives off the floral aroma you are paying for, so add it late or use it raw whenever you can. Folding raw pulp into a finished mousse or curd keeps the perfume that long cooking destroys.

The other mistake is under-sweetening. Straight pulp is far too tart to eat by the spoonful, so taste as you go and expect more sugar than you think. When sieving for juice, do not press so hard that you grind the seeds, or you pull bitterness into the cup.

Substitutes

There is no exact stand-in for that perfume, but you can get close by use. For the tartness in a curd or mousse, lime juice with a little mango or apricot puree mimics the acid and the tropical edge.

Frozen passion fruit pulp and bottled passion fruit juice or concentrate are the best swaps when fresh is out of season, and they save the straining step entirely.

For a garnish where you want the look of the seeds, pomegranate arils give a similar jeweled crunch. In a pinch, a splash of guava or mango nectar sharpened with lime covers the fruity-tart role in a drink.

Buying and Storage

Look for fruit that feels heavy for its size with deeply wrinkled, dimpled skin. A smooth taut shell means underripe; the wrinkles are the sign the fruit has ripened and the pulp inside has concentrated.

A smooth one will still ripen on the counter over a few days.

Ripe fruit keeps in the refrigerator for about a week. Underripe smooth fruit should sit at room temperature until it wrinkles, then move to the fridge.

The pulp freezes beautifully. Scoop it into an ice cube tray, freeze, then bag the cubes for up to several months so you always have a hit of the aroma for drinks and desserts.

Quick facts

Where to find passion fruit: Passion fruit is usually found in the fruit section or aisle of the grocery store or supermarket.

In Chinese
百香果
British (UK) term
Passion fruit
en français
fruit de la passion
en español
maracuyá

Recipes using passion fruit

There are 17 recipes that contain this ingredient.

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Passion Fruit Mousse

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Passion fruit mousse blends fresh passion fruit pulp with sweetened condensed milk, served chilled inside the emptied fruit shells with a cherry on top. Two-ingredient tropical dessert.

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Passionfruit Cake

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An exotic and decadent cake that is made with the wonderful fruit taste of passionfruit.

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Tropical Fruit Daiquiris

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Fresh tropical fruit daiquiris blended with light rum, lime juice, and your choice of passion fruit, mango, papaya, or guava. Ready in 15 minutes, serves 6. Your new go-to party cocktail.

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Orange, Passionfruit & Yogurt Cupcakes

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Deliciously moist cupcakes packed with tempting flavors. These go splendidly with a cream cheese frosting!

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Mango & lime sorbet

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Only spend several mins, a fantastic sorbet is showed to you!

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Waffles with three toppings

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A nice dessert, there are three great toppings on the top, mixing very well!

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Passionfruit & Peach Cake

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A fruity and delicious cake that's made with walnuts, peaches and exotic passionfruit.

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Digestion Boosting Fruit Salad

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As we age our bodies' ability to produce digestive enzymes diminishes. Similarly, cooking foods destroys the majority of digestive enzymes found naturally in foods, compromising our ability to absorb nutrients from the foods we consume. This salad contains papaya and pineapple, which are both loaded with powerful digestive enzymes. Kiwi fruit is a very rich source of vitamin C to boost immunity. Adding organic yoghurt (or coconut yoghurt) to the salad is a great way to take in probiotics and further boost the digestion-enhancing properties of this salad.

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Blueberry Passion Fruit Smoothie

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A tropical blueberry passion fruit smoothie with banana, yogurt, and toasted wheat germ. Thick, creamy, and naturally sweetened with honey. Serves 4 in under 5 minutes.

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Orange Angel Food Cake with Caramel Sauce & Tropical Fruit Compote

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Orange angel food cake with cardamom caramel sauce and tropical fruit compote of mango, passion fruit, kiwi, and blood orange. A three-part make-ahead showstopper for dinner parties.

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Tisana

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Tropical Venezuelan sparkling wine punch bursting with passion fruit, citrus slices, and bubbles. Mix, chill, and serve this festive tisana over ice for easy entertaining.

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Alain Senderen's Salade de Fruit Exotique

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An ideal fruit salad or dessert for Winter, because the tropical fruits are available year-round and ripen naturally. The riper and more fragrant the fruit, the better the salad.

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Mango Passion Fruit Gelato

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Mango passion fruit gelato blends fresh mango puree with tangy passion fruit nectar and half-and-half for a creamy tropical frozen dessert. Churns up in minutes with no egg yolks.

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Ceviche Solero

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Tropical ceviche with red snapper and shrimp marinated in lime, orange juice, and passion fruit puree with jalapeno and cilantro. A Latin American showpiece appetizer.

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Australian Cheesecake

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This Australian cheesecake is cloud-light with whipped cream and beaten egg whites folded into a tangy cream cheese filling with passion fruit and lemon zest. Baked low and slow on a crisp graham crust.

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Granadilla Cake

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For your next dinner party, bring this decadent cake that's made with almonds and passionfruit.

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Granadilla Cake

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For your next dinner party, bring this decadent cake that's made with almonds and passionfruit.

All 17 recipes

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