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La Platicona Habla: Tastes, Passions and Pursuits

For food lovers, hungry people, and cooking officionados or novices. This blog is for people who are real cooks, wannabe cooks, or no cooks at all. Almost all of these recipes are vegetarian, some use seafood. Recipes are creations of my own, adaptations from cookbooks, or from other internet sources with links.

Strange Fruit

September 27, 2007

There have been some strange fruit showing up at the grocery store lately, and naturally, they ended up in my grocery cart. Dragon Fruit, a member of the cactus family, was easily recognized by my boyfriend who ate them regularly while he was in China this summer. The fruit has a beautiful fuscia outer skin, and looks like an overgrown egg with petals. The Dragon Fruit is also called a Pitaya, and blooms only at night. When you cut into the fruit, it looks nothing like the outside and nothing like you'd expect it to, especially if you've eaten other cactus fruits like Nopalitos. The flesh is white and freckled with little black seeds. The flavor is not strong, but reminds me of a soft fleshed jicama. The fruit would make a great mixed drink or sorbet - but frankly, on its own it is sort of plain.




Now my second purchase, Monstera Deliciosa, had to mature before I ate it. Whoever named this fruit certainly had seen no other fruit as ugly and abnormal as the Monstera. Yes, its name means monstrous, but its second name indeed means delicious. The fruit is found in nature on the Monstera plant vines that grown throughout the tropical regions of Latin America. These monstrosities are creeper vines that can grow as large as trees and drop roots from the forrest canopy to the forrest floor. The fruit is the shape of an overgrown banana with a scaley texture - the scales are bright green when immature, but left to ripen they turn black and fall off revealing the flesh beneath that is only edible when ripe (if you cut it open while unripe, it will expose oxallic acid which is inedible and dangerous).




I left my little monster fruit to mature. The picture to the right here is when I frist bought it. It took about two weeks to fully mature and the "kernels" fell off on their own (scaley nightmare to the left). The taste was uniquely "banapinapple" and sort of mushy. You couldn't really cut it up, rather, it is like eating corn on the cob in the sense that you eat the flesh off of the core which is inedible. I frankly did not like the fruit because it burned the edges of my mouth, but the smell is fantastic - perhaps I'd prefer it in a breakfast drink with some yogurt, but I don't think the Monstera Deliciosa will grace my counter ever again. I guess I just don't have a place in my heart for a fruit that sheds before becoming consumable.


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posted by Anonymous, Thursday, September 27, 2007

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