Tag Archives: Breadfruit

It’s Horrible Outside!

It is full on rainy season and it is absolutely pouring down.  Every morning we have been waking up to thunderstorms and torrential rain.  Water is flowing in tiny little streams on our farm and we haven’t been able to get out to work  for a full week.  This morning, Gnome said, “…oh that’s interesting…the weather report said it was going to be bright and sunny with a 1% chance of rain.”  Well, looks like we got the 1% or the weather report is totally, wildly inaccurate…I suspect the second.  😉

Anyway, this is the best time for pumpkins, gourds and all manner of curcubits.  The water allows the them to swell up into humongous fruit…and, I think this is the best part…those beetles that like to drill holes into all my tasty, delectable vegetables can’t get out to burrow holes because of the rains!  Ahhh, of course that is the silver-lining cloudy thing that Hallmark people like to point out to me.  😉

These are some bottle gourds harvested from our farm.  We eat most of them young but I have left three of them to mature to use as vessels to store some of our home-made wine.

Bottle Gourd Harvest.

We had our first breadfruit harvest this year; it has taken three years for the trees to start baring.  We probably have harvested about 100 from three young trees.

Breadfruit Tree
Breadfruit

We are eating the fruit as a potato substitute; of course, as all Belizeans will testify, breadfruit is best fried in oil:

We like to cut them into “chip” shapes (easier to eat with chopsticks!) but most people around here have them as half or quarter wedges.

Fried Breadfruit Chips.

Gnome cooked a breadfruit stew with his usual home-made wine, tomato sauce Italian thing.  It was very good:

Chopped Breadfruit.
Breadfruit Stew.

Oh, and Gnome has been sticking coke bottles around coconut trees…what is he up to?

Coke Bottle in Coconuts.

Pictures From The Farm.

Together.Tank.TopHello Everyone!!  It is Friday again so you must be all out having fun!  Here are some pictures from the farm:

Today we harvested our gourds which Gnome will be using to make me a dinner set (GnomeWare TM).  It will be a six month wait for them to completely dry out before he can even start doing anything with them.

Bunch of Gourds.
Bunch of Gourds.

It has been frightfully hot lately so I have been drying breadfruit out in the sun.  I had cut the breadfruit into fair-sized chunks of about 1cm (1/2 inch) and it took about three days for them to get to a very hard dehydrated state.

Green Breadfruit.
Green Breadfruit.

Dried Breadfruit Pieces:

Dried Breadfruit.
Dried Breadfruit.

We have these really tasty fruits in season which are crunchy like apples.  This is Ziziphus mauritania, otherwise known as Chinese apple, Indian jujube or Indian plum.

Chinese Apple.
Chinese Apple.

We are just eating them green right now.  They are also edible dried and actually dry into Chinese red dates which are used in Asian cuisine.

Chinese Red Dates.
Chinese Red Dates.

Good Night!!

Breadfruit: A Great Potato Alternative.

Munchkin.Hair.FlowingBreadfruit (Artocarpus  sp.) has an interesting history in the Caribbean as it was introduced into the area during the 18th century as a staple for the slaves in the British colonies.  The breadfruit was originally from Tahiti. Nowadays, this past is long forgotten and breadfruit is enjoyed for what it is.  A very yummy carbohydrate which when boiled, tastes just like potato.  Interestingly enough, I have never seen this carbohydrate served in restaurants here as it is still seen as a “poor man’s food.”

Green Breadfruit.
Green Breadfruit.

Breadfruit trees bear prolifically and a single seasonal harvest can give hundreds of fruit.

We have young trees on the farm right now and they will soon start to bear in the coming years.

These fruit contain approximately 25% carbohydrate and 70% water.  They are extremely versatile because they can be eaten green or ripe.  The most popular way of eating them green, at least here in Belize, is deep-frying them oil.  Other ways are boiling, pan-frying, baking and steaming.  When the fruits mature, they turn soft and sweet.  At this point, they can be made into various types of puddings.  I have a friend (Filipino) who flattens the ripe fruit into a pizza shape and bakes it in the oven to make a sweet flat bread.

With this fruit, the need for preservation is very important since there is simply so much of it.  I recently acquired four of these fruits and even with this quantity, I found it hard to think of ways to prepare and store.  Once picked, they will mature in about 4 to 7 days.

Method 1 Preservation method: blanching and freezing.

Blanched Breadfruit.
Blanched Breadfruit.

This is a reasonable method but there is only so much space in the freezer!!  You can imagine how stuffed my freezer is with so many other things.

Method 2 Preservation method: Sun Drying.

This is a better alternative especially when the breadfruit is 70% water and so you can cut the pieces to dry in relatively large chunks.  They can then be stored in air-tight containers therefore taking up less space.  Still,  I will need to procure a 55 gallon container to store all of the dried product should my trees start bearing by the hundreds.  That is what I call food security!!  I will be experimenting with this method over the next few days; it is really, really hot and dry right now so they should dry really well.  I will keep you updated on my Munchkin experimentation!!

There is also another method of preservation which involves digging a hole in the ground and storing the ripe breadfruits under-ground thereby allowing natural fermentation.  I am not sure if that would work here because the water table is so high in Belize.

Munchkin.Eating.MeatBreadfruit tastes very much like potato, more so than other tropical carbohydrates like cassava or taro.  Because of this, it can be used as an alternative for any traditional recipes calling for potato.  Watch this space for my breadfruit recipes!!