The Nobleman Retort -clymenia- May 2026

DNA barcoding confirmed it: the lost Nobleman’s Retort.

However, the fruit known commercially as "The Nobleman Retort -Clymenia-" is not the wild variety. It is a specific, cultivated polyploid (a plant with more than two sets of chromosomes) selected for one purpose: Part 2: The Legend of the "Retort" Why "Retort"? The word has two meanings, both of which apply to this fruit. The Nobleman Retort -Clymenia-

If you ever see a small, necked fruit with a scent that smells like a lime being devoured by a jasmine flower—do not bite it like an apple. Respect the retort. Bite the peel first, endure the sour, and wait for the noble reply. DNA barcoding confirmed it: the lost Nobleman’s Retort

Since 2020, a private consortium (led by a former Dior perfumer and a Michelin-starred chef) has managed to cultivate a micro-orchard of 200 trees inside a climate-controlled bunker in Bordeaux, France. The word has two meanings, both of which apply to this fruit

If you have never heard of this fruit, you are in the vast majority. But for citrus botanists, Michelin-starred chefs, and fragrance perfumers, the Clymenia is the holy grail. This article dives deep into the origins, the explosive flavor profile, and the intriguing legend behind "The Nobleman Retort." To understand the "Nobleman Retort," we must first strip away the marketing mystique and look at the biology. The Clymenia genus is one of the least understood and most primitive members of the Rutaceae family (the citrus family).