Belimbing wuluh (*Averrhoa bilimbi*, also called bilimbi or cucumber tree) is a small tree indigenous to the Malay Peninsula and Indonesian archipelago, producing finger-shaped, ribbed, intensely sour fruits that grow directly from the trunk and main branches (a cauliflorous habit — the same that produces cacao pods on their trunks). The fruit is almost impossibly sour raw — pH approximately 2.0, similar to concentrated lemon juice — and this extreme acidity is precisely its culinary value. In Indonesian cooking, belimbing wuluh provides a specific, clean, green-vegetal sourness that tamarind does not — less sweet, more sharp, with a slightly astringent edge. It is the preferred souring agent in Javanese and Sundanese light preparations (clear soups, sour fish preparations, sambal belimbing wuluh) where tamarind's sweetness would be intrusive.
Belimbing Wuluh — Averrhoa bilimbi, The Cucumber Tree
Indonesian Deep Extraction — Batch 14