Limes — season, tips, and recipes in New Zealand
Limes is a fruit available in New Zealand during April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, peaking in June, July, August. This page is a practical guide for home cooks: when to buy limes, how to pick a good one, how to store it, what it goes well with, three original recipes, and detailed nutrition information.
NZ-grown limes (mainly Tahitian/Persian variety) are available through winter. Kaffir lime leaves are grown in Northland for Thai and Southeast Asian cooking.
How to pick a good one
Should be firm and heavy. A little yellow is fine and can actually mean more juice. Avoid hard, dry ones.
How to store it
Room temperature for a week, fridge for 2-3 weeks. Juice and freeze in ice cube trays.
Goes well with
chilli: Lime and chilli is a fundamental combination across Mexican, Thai, and Vietnamese cooking. The acid carries heat differently than without it -- sharper and more penetrating. The combination also smells better than either alone.
coconut: Coconut's fat is sweet and heavy. Lime acid cuts through it and makes the whole thing taste lighter and more tropical. Every good coconut curry has lime in it for structural reasons.
coriander: Lime, chilli, and coriander form a flavour trio that appears independently across multiple South and Southeast Asian cuisines. Lime's acid, coriander's aromatic lift, chilli's heat -- together they create brightness.
fish sauce: Fish sauce is powerfully savoury and pungent. Lime acid moderates the funk and adds a clean sharpness that makes the combination taste fresh rather than just fishy. The base of most Thai dipping sauces.
ginger: Both are sharp-edged and high-contrast. Lime's cold, citrus acidity and ginger's warm, peppery heat create a wide flavour spectrum from two ingredients. A common pairing in Southeast Asian and Caribbean cooking.
Recipes
Thai-Style Dressing
Goes on everything.
Ingredients: 2 limes (juice), 1 tbsp fish sauce, 1 tbsp brown sugar, 1 small chilli (sliced), 1 clove garlic (minced)
Method: Mix everything. Adjust to balance sour, salty, sweet, hot. Use on salads, noodles, grilled meat.
Lime & Coconut Rice
Side dish that steals the show.
Ingredients: 1 cup rice, 200ml coconut milk, 200ml water, 1 lime (zest and juice), pinch salt
Method: Cook rice in coconut milk and water with salt. When done, stir through lime zest and juice. Fluff with fork.
Key Lime Posset
3 ingredients. Tastes like effort.
Ingredients: 300ml cream, 80g sugar, 3 limes (juice and zest)
Method: Heat cream and sugar until simmering. Remove from heat. Stir in lime juice and zest. Pour into small glasses. Chill 3 hours until set.
Nutrition
One lime provides 32% of your daily vitamin C. Contains unique flavonoid compounds studied for antimicrobial properties. The zest has higher concentrations of nutrients than the juice. About 20 calories per lime. Like lemons, adding lime juice to meals helps your body absorb iron from plant foods.