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Paw Paw

Fruit

Asimina triloba

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Paw Paw is North America's largest native fruit, producing custard-textured, tropical-flavored fruit on a small deciduous understory tree. It thrives in rich, moist woodland edges and is remarkably cold-hardy for a fruit with such exotic-tasting flesh. Often overlooked in commercial cultivation, it rewards home growers with generous harvests and little pest pressure.

Paw Paw

Growing Conditions

Sunlight

Full Sun to Partial Shade

Water Needs

Moderate

Soil

Deep, rich, well-drained loam with high organic matter; slightly acidic to neutral pH 5.5–7.0; does not tolerate waterlogged or compacted soils

Spacing

15 to 20 feet

Days to Maturity

3–8 years from seed to first fruit; grafted trees typically fruit in 3–5 years

Growing Zones

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

Thrives in USDA Zones 5 - 9

When to Plant

  • Transplant

    Plant bare-root or containerized trees in early spring while dormant, or in fall after leaf drop; minimize root disturbance

  • Direct Sow

    Sow cold-stratified seeds in fall directly in the ground or in spring after 90–120 days of cold-moist stratification

  • Harvest

    Harvest when fruit yields slightly to gentle pressure and the skin turns yellow-green to golden; fruit separates easily from the branch and has a fragrant tropical scent; typically September–October depending on zone

Phenology (Natural Timing Cues)

Transplant

Paw Paws have brittle, fleshy taproots that strongly dislike disturbance; transplanting at the wrong time or with damaged roots causes high mortality. Plant while fully dormant in early spring before bud swell, or in fall after leaf drop when roots can establish without heat stress. Container-grown trees transplant more successfully than bare-root stock and can be moved slightly later.

  • Forsythia finishing bloom signals safe early-spring bare-root planting window
  • Tree buds are swelling but have not yet broken into leaf
  • Soil is workable and draining cleanly, no longer frost-locked
  • Fall planting: leaves have dropped and daytime temperatures are consistently below 55°F

Start Dates (Your Location)

Average dates use your saved zone; readiness also checks your forecast when available.

Open Seed Starting Date Calculator

Best Planting Window

Spring window

Early spring

Plant as soon as the soil is workable so roots establish before heat arrives.

Autumn window

Usually skip autumn planting

Use spring unless you have locally grown nursery stock and enough mild weather for roots to establish.

Planting Method

Plant a grafted bare-root nursery tree. Seed-grown fruit trees are not true-to-type, so nursery stock is the reliable path to known fruit quality.

Critical Timing Note

Plant while dormant and before bud break so roots establish before leaves demand water.

Current ReadinessWeather data unavailable

Use the average timing, but check your local forecast before planting.

Typical Harvest Window

August to October

Organic Growing Tips

  • Top-dress with finished compost each spring to feed the shallow feeder roots and sustain the rich soil biology paw paw prefers

  • Apply 4–6 inches of wood chip mulch around the drip line, keeping mulch away from the trunk, to retain moisture and slowly build organic matter as it breaks down

  • Use worm casting tea as a root drench during establishment years to encourage mycorrhizal colonization of the taproot system

  • Avoid disturbing the soil around established paw paw roots; they form beneficial fungal networks that support the understory guild

  • Plant native understory companions like spicebush and wild ginger beneath the canopy to build a self-sustaining woodland-edge system that reduces fertility and watering needs

  • Attract and augment the paw paw's natural blowfly and beetle pollinators by hanging mesh bags of overripe fruit near trees during bloom, or hand-pollinate with a small brush between two genetically distinct trees

Care Guidance

Optional seasonal guidance for what you can do, even when nothing is urgent.
  • Watering

    If the top 2 inches of soil feel dry, a deep watering at the base may help more than frequent light watering. In healthy soil, rain may cover much of what it needs.

  • Feeding

    If growth is strong, compost-rich soil often carries most of the load. If the plant starts looking pale or stalls, a light compost top-dressing or gentle organic feed may help.

  • Pruning

    If pruning is needed, dormancy or the period just after harvest is often the simplest window. Dead, damaged, or crossing growth is usually the first place to start.

  • Seasonal care

    In late fall, a light cleanup and fresh mulch can help if winter protection is useful in your climate. Leaving a little space around crowns and trunks often helps air move and keeps excess moisture from sitting there.

Pollination & Fruit Production

Known Varieties

Common cultivars worth knowing
  • Shenandoah

    A leading USDA-bred cultivar prized for large fruit with mild, sweet flavor and relatively few seeds; one of the most widely planted named paw paw cultivars in home orchards.

    Best for

    Home orchards and fresh eating

  • Susquehanna

    Produces very large fruit with exceptionally rich, complex flavor and low fiber content; considered by many tasters to be among the highest-quality paw paw cultivars available.

    Best for

    Fresh eating and flavor-focused gardens

  • Mango

    An older, widely available cultivar with consistent yields and good flavor; more tolerant of variable growing conditions than some newer selections and useful as a pollinator partner.

    Best for

    Reliable cropping and pollinator pairing

  • PA Golden

    A seedling selection from Pennsylvania noted for cold-hardiness and golden-yellow flesh; well-suited to the northern edge of the paw paw's range in zones 5–6.

    Best for

    Cold-climate zones 5–6

Companion Planting

Good companions

Support & insectary plants

Nearby plants that attract pollinators, beneficial insects, or improve soil health.

  • elderberry

    Attracts pollinators

  • spicebush

    Attracts pollinators and beneficial insects

  • comfrey

    Attracts beneficial insects and produces nutrient-rich mulch

Avoid planting near

No known conflicts

Common Pests

  • paw paw peduncle borer
  • zebra swallowtail caterpillar
  • squirrels
  • opossums
  • raccoons

All pest management in Garden uses safe, organic, non-toxic methods only. No synthetic pesticides, ever.

Simple Ways to Use

Start here if you're not sure how to use this crop in the kitchen.

Quick recipes you can make right away

  • Fresh Pawpaw Spoonfuls

    Cut a fully ripe pawpaw open and scoop out the soft flesh with a spoon once the fruit gives easily and smells sweet and tropical. Eat it right away while the flesh is creamy, because overripe pawpaw turns strong and fermented quickly.

  • Pawpaw Smoothie

    Blend ripe pawpaw flesh with yogurt or milk for 20 to 30 seconds until smooth and thick, then taste before adding sweetener. Use only fully ripe flesh with no bitter peel or seed fragments mixed in.

  • Pawpaw Pulp for Baking

    Scoop the ripe flesh away from the seeds and skins, mash it smooth, and stir it into quick bread or custard recipes just until combined. The pulp is ready when it is completely smooth and no large fibrous pieces remain.

How to Preserve

Use this section to store or process extra harvest before it spoils.

Practical methods for extra harvest

  • Freeze pawpaw pulp

    Scoop ripe flesh from the skins and seeds, mash or blend it smooth, and freeze it in small containers with a little headspace. Freeze it in recipe-size portions because thawed pawpaw is best for baking, smoothies, or custards rather than neat slices.

  • Freeze pawpaw cubes

    Cut ripe flesh into chunks, spread them on a tray, and freeze until firm before bagging so they stay separate. Use the cubes frozen for smoothies or quick blending, because thawed pawpaw becomes too soft for a fruit plate.

  • Make chilled pawpaw puree

    Blend ripe flesh until smooth, chill it thoroughly, and refrigerate or freeze it in small portions for later dessert use. Use refrigerated puree within a couple of days because pawpaw develops off flavors fast once opened and mashed.

How to Store

Simple storage tips

  • Keep firm pawpaws at room temperature until they soften and smell fragrant, because they do not taste fully developed while still hard.

  • Once ripe, refrigerate them and use them within about 1 to 3 days, because pawpaw has a very short shelf life.

  • Handle ripe fruit gently, because the skin bruises easily and the flesh underneath turns brown quickly.

  • Use fruit that has soft spots first for pulp or smoothies, because even lightly overripe pawpaw changes fast.

  • Do not expect long counter storage - pawpaw moves from underripe to ripe to overripe faster than most orchard fruit.

How to Save Seed

Step-by-step seed saving

  1. 1

    Pawpaw seed is not the practical way to keep the same named variety, because selected pawpaw varieties are usually grafted and seedlings vary from the parent.

  2. 2

    If you want more of the same pawpaw, buy a grafted tree or propagate from that selection instead of planting saved seed.

  3. 3

    Seeds can be saved only for breeding or experimentation, not for keeping a named pawpaw true to type.

Native Range

Origin
Native to eastern North America.
Native Habitat
Moist, rich bottomland forests and stream corridors.
Current Distribution
Eastern United States; grown in home orchards and food forests.

Taxonomy

Kingdom
Plantae
Family
Custard Apple Family (Annonaceae)
Genus
Asimina
Species
triloba

Morphology

  • Root System

    Paw paw develops a deep, fleshy taproot with sparse lateral roots, making transplanting of established trees nearly impossible and requiring careful siting at planting; it also spreads by root suckers to form multi-stem clonal colonies, which aids pollination when multiple genotypes are present.

  • Stem

    Young trees have smooth gray-brown bark and a distinctive slightly drooping branch structure; the wood is soft and pithy, so trees rarely exceed 25 feet, and root suckering means the 'trunk' of a mature grove is often a ring of clonal stems from a single genetic plant.

  • Leaves

    Large, oblong-obovate leaves (8–12 inches) with a strong unpleasant odor when crushed, which deters most browsing herbivores; leaves emerge late in spring and turn a clear butter-yellow in fall, serving as a reliable seasonal harvest-timing signal as they begin to droop when fruit is ripening.

  • Flowers

    Dark maroon, nodding, slightly fetid blossoms appear in early spring before leaf-out and are pollinated primarily by blowflies and carrion beetles rather than bees; because a single clone cannot pollinate itself, planting two or more genetically distinct trees within 50 feet is essential for fruit set.

  • Fruit

    The fruit is a large, oblong berry with smooth green-yellow skin and rich, custardy pale-yellow flesh surrounding several large brown seeds; ripe fruit softens noticeably, develops a sweet tropical scent, and must be harvested promptly as it deteriorates within 3–5 days at room temperature but holds 3 weeks refrigerated.

Natural History

Asimina triloba is the northernmost member of the tropical Annonaceae family and the only temperate species in a genus of mostly subtropical shrubs native to the eastern United States. Indigenous peoples including the Cherokee, Iroquois, and Potawatomi harvested paw paws as a significant late-summer food, and Hernando de Soto's 1541 expedition recorded Native communities cultivating the fruit along the Mississippi. Lewis and Clark relied on paw paw during food-scarce stretches of their 1804–1806 expedition. Despite this deep cultural record, the fruit was nearly absent from commercial agriculture by the 20th century due to its short shelf life - key grower consideration for harvest planning and fresh-use timing.

Traditional Use

Indigenous peoples of the eastern woodlands documented historical uses of paw paw bark, seeds, and leaves, primarily recorded by ethnobotanists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The seeds attracted scientific interest in the 20th century when researchers identified annonaceous acetogenins - otent bioactive compounds that became subjects of laboratory study. Historical records focus on the Cherokee and other eastern nations who noted properties of the bark and seeds in non-food contexts.

Parts Noted Historically

seedsbarkleaves
  • Cherokee traditional use, documented in Moerman's Native American Ethnobotany - bark

    Cherokee peoples were documented using inner bark preparations in contexts recorded in 19th-century ethnobotanical surveys, with bark strips also employed practically as cordage for binding and weaving.

  • Purdue University annonaceous acetogenin research, 1980s–1990s - seeds

    Researchers at Purdue documented that paw paw seeds contain high concentrations of annonaceous acetogenins, compounds that generated significant scientific literature interest; this research built on earlier observations by Indigenous communities that seeds were not eaten.

Paw paw seeds and bark contain annonaceous acetogenins that are toxic if eaten; seeds should never be consumed. Some individuals experience contact dermatitis from the leaves and unripe fruit skin. The ripe fruit pulp is edible and widely consumed, but people with sensitivity to related tropical fruits (such as cherimoya) may experience reactions.

This information is provided for historical and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions related to your health.

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