Tag Archives: Soursop

Some Interesting Things to Eat.

We are always into eating on the farm and it’s always good to experiment with food.  Here are a few interesting things to eat this season.

Ahhh…this first one starts with a story.  For a while, the geese forgot there was a pond and hung around the house chasing us around the yard whenever the mood took them (which was very frequently).  Then one day, they remembered that there was a pond and en masse trooped off to the pond.  When we went to see what they were up to, they were diving under the water lilies and emerging back to the surface  with round things the size of chestnuts stuffed in their beaks.  They were gobbling them down like there was no tomorrow.  And they were back the next day for more of the same.

Pond:

Pond.

After a week or so of watching the geese stuff their faces, Gnome decided to wade into the pond to find out what they were eating.  What he discovered was water lilly corms embedded in the mud.  He dug up a bucket of these and told me that there was tonnes of them.

“Oh, it would be great if we could eat these too!”

And of course we did a Google search on “can you eat water lily corms” and sure enough, you can.  It’s not just for geese.

Water Lily Corms.

To prepare, peel the outer layer to reveal a whitish carbohydrate-like food which can be boiled to eat.  I will have more pictures later of the cooked corms.  They taste like yam with a mild crunchy texture.  Not extra-ordinary (like any carb really, you kinda dress it up for flavour) but definitely edible and worth harvesting if they are just there for the picking.  Better than paying for shop bought potatoes!

The next interesting edible is the soursop.  This year our tree is loaded so we are getting to experiment with it more.

Soursop.

From the information that I have gleaned from the Belizeans, the fruit is usually scraped over a sieve and the juice is collected to make juice, ice-cream and smoothies.  The fruit has a cotton-like texture and tastes mildly sour with fine banana-like nuances.  In short, it has its own particular soursop flavour and it is very difficult to liken it to any well-known food.  My preparation method involves taking the seeds out of the fruit  and eating the pulp as it is.

Soursop pulp:

Soursop Pulp.

Personally, I prefer to do this so that none of the fruit is wasted.  Since Gnome and I have been going crazy with a gelato marathon right now, we have been making soursop gelato.  By the way, when I say “gelato” I am not trying to appear fanciful.  Gelato simply means that you are making an iced milk product with less air in it. We personally prefer this texture to the puffed up fluffiness of soft serve ice-cream.  We are also not adding any sugar to the gelato so that the dessert is naturally sweetened with fruit only.  In our latest experimentation we have found that a combination of banana (a variety called ice-cream banana incidentally) and soursop gives a very good texture and flavour without any sugar.  Ice-cream bananas are very smooth and creamy:

Ice Cream Bananas.

Last but not least, this is an interesting edible pod.  This is called Bukut in Belize and the trees are flowering every where right now.  The blooms are a showy pink and make a nice ornamental if you have a very large yard!  Very big tree! Anyway, the pods can get up to about 2 feet in length and to prepare, crack open and eat the pulp which are adhered to discs. (you can crunch through the whole thing). The seeds are not edible and are very hard in consistency…I think they use the seeds in Hawaii to make jewellery.

Bukut.

This is worth trying: the pulp of the bukut is sticky like thick syrup and tastes like molasses combined with oyster sauce.  Really nice!!  More for the Asian types that are used to fermented like products like miso and soya sauce.  This is also very popular with the Belizeans.   Gnome made a bukut frappe the other day; it was tasty….would go great with a shot of rum!!  Gnome’s already thinking of using it as a flavouring for wine.

Bukut Frappe.

Here are some pictures.  We gathered this lot from Belcampo Lodge in Toledo, Belize; our bukut tree has just started flowering this year and there are only a few pods on our tree so far.

They look great as foragable hors d’oeuvres (I just made that up but it’s the kind of thing people like to market!).

Podded Bukut.
Bukut.

This is how we make our lives interesting on the farm.  A combination of curiosity and creativity!

What A Relief!!

Ahhhh!!!  It’s actually cool today…what a relief from the unrelenting hot, dry weather.  When it’s blistering hot every day, you always feel that there is no end in sight.  So today we had already decided not to have our 4am wake up alarm and wake up with the light.  Waking up naturally is such a lovely thing and we had the added bonus of a cool weather change.  Great stuff: we are both in better spirits with the cool weather;  heat makes you hot-headed and tense all the time…it’s maddening!!

Anyway, I took the time to walk around the farm to take some pictures to give you an update on what’s happening.

Oh, the garden is getting very bushy; despite the dryness this year, we have managed to get plenty of greens from our bucket garden.

Container Garden.

The fennel is flowering.  We can collect seeds and start a whole load of these:

Flowering Fennel.

Gnome’s tobacco: Not fi eat!!  That’s flowering too:

Tobacco Flowering.

Jalapeño peppers are doing really well:

Jalapeno Peppers

The farm keeps on producing and we feel so fortunate that we have an abundance of food.

Jackfruit is loaded:

Lots of Jackfruit.

It’s been a good year for soursop:

Lots of Soursop.

(Hi Tanya!!  I’ll let you know when some are ready!!  🙂 )

Look What The Wee Wee Ants Are Doing!

Munchkin.BossieCan you believe what the wee wee ants are doing on our farm?  We have one soursop tree here and the ants are systematically peeling the skins off the fruit.  They leave the fruit whole and intact like this…you have to catch them before they go splattt!!

Wee Wee Peeled Soursop.
Wee Wee Peeled Soursop.

Here are some that I have rescued with a few holes on them.  Look closely and you will see the ants crawling all over them.

Wee Wee Ants Peeling Soursop.
Wee Wee Ants Peeling Soursop.

I have written about these ants before but just in case you missed it here is a brief recap:

These leaf cutter ants (wee wee ants) usually form mounds above ground which lead down to their underground cities.  I call them “cities” because these nests can grow to 100 ft (30m) across with smaller radiating mounds growing to about 260ft (80m) and can house eight million ants.  Amazing!!

They cultivate a fungus by feeding it with fresh cut plant material (ie. all our lovely plants and trees).  Furthermore, these ants carry a bacterium which protects the fungi from pests and molds.  This is a really nice symbiotic relationship…sometimes you wish that us humans could form a better mutualistic relatiionship with the planet in the same way as these ants!  The fungus is used to feed the ant larvae.

We have tried all sorts of ways to get rid of them and alas, have even resorted to ritualistic practice, dancing, singing and talking (nicely) to them.  None of it works!!  What to do…

Fruits in Season.

Munchkin.Shouting

There is always something new to harvest on the farm.  Right now, the mulberries have just started.

Mulberry Tree.
Mulberry Tree.

I will be collecting this fruit to make our very popular Mulberry Elixir.  The final product is a beautiful dark purple colour and it has a lovely, rich berry taste.

This one is a local fruit called monkey cap.  It has the consistency of peanut butter and is much-loved by the birds.  For all bird-lovers out there, this is one to plant if want to attract all the birdies with pretty colours.  The toucans like this one.

Monkey Caps.
Monkey Caps.

The monkey cap tree also makes a nice ornamental for those into landscaping.

Monkey Cap Tree.
Monkey Cap Tree.

Oh, and last but not least…we got our first soursop of the year.  Everyone in Belize loves this fruit.  I can’t give it justice by describing it but it has a kind of wet cotton-like consistency with a unique tropical fruit taste.  I asked Gnome to help me describe the flavour and this is what he said:

“Well…it tastes like a soursop!”

Gnome.at.Lunch.Table

Well, Thank-you Gnome…that was extremely helpful!!

Big Soursop.
Big Soursop.

The farm keeps on producing!!

Pictures From The Farm.

Winter Time in Belize.
Winter Time in Belize.

Since we have been doing a super clean up of the farm in this fabulous weather (bright and sunny with no rain) I thought I would take this opportunity to share some pictures of the farm.  It is remarkable how great it looks when it is not all bushy with high grass!

When we first came to Belize, 10 years ago we ventured into the bush in search of rosewood seeds to start a grove on our farm.  Over years, there has been much logging of these magnificent trees and they are dwindling in number.  We have set up this grove as a “seed bank” so that there will still be opportunity to cultivate these trees in the future.  Our rosewood trees are looking good and gives a shaded place for a cool picnic area.

Rosewood Trees.
Rosewood Trees.

The first young fruits of the soursop have just started  which is a much-loved fruit of the Tropics:

Soursop
Soursop

And this is roseapple which tastes of rose petals.  They are actually very hard to spot because of the green colour…if only they would turn pink or red!  I think all of our resident birdies taste of roses since they are the ones eating most of them…

Flowering Rose Apple.
Flowering Rose Apple.

Last but not least, our lovely pond area where we would like to house a gaggle of geese!  One day, we shall have loads of geese a-honking in our pond!!

View Of The Pond.
View Of The Pond.

An Elixir Tasting For Today.

Liqueur.Tasting.TogetherToday turned out in such a way that we ended up having a Soursop Elixir Tasting between the two of us.  A few days ago, we sold a few bottles of Soursop Elixir to somebody who, we subsequently found out, was a repeat customer who had bought the same Elixir before.

I reprint his comments below to show how we handled the situation (Italics and spacing are mine for easier reading).

I was at your gate last friday to receive an order of soursop liquor/elixer . The road was blocked on the way out of Barranco so we spent the night there were I tasted the elixer on which I fell asleep very fast.

It took me a long time to come to Toledo to be able to find you after several friends talked about this extra ordinary soursop drink. Soursop has been my favorite fruit and drink for years ever since I was in Suriname in the 1960’s.

To tell you the truth I did not taste very much soursop at all and if you had made me taste it before the purchase I would have thought it would be some sort of Grappa.

My questions are now : Did you taste the specific batch? Because other people who had tasted your soursop elixer before asked themselves if you had changed the recipe or that it was filled with something else.

My input was that it was made of the seeds because I did pass out very fast after the consumption of one small shotglass.
Because in drinking a soursop shake years ago in Honduras were they mixed the seeds in the shake I passed out about the same way as I did in Barranco. Later I heard that the seeds are like a sort of Valium/relaxant. Or did you make it of the leaves as a sort of medecine because I don’t taste any soursop fruit.

Looking forward to your reaction!
Kindest Greetings!

}

We find this type of feedback very useful as it allows us to review our quality procedures and make sure that we are not missing anything.  I mean, we think our stuff is the best because we make it, it is good to get real opinions in order to make sure that our bias is not clouding our ability to see reality.

Anyway, in response to this, we sat down and “did” a formal tasting of our Soursop Elixir and proceeded to write the following:

Thank you for your feedback, it is nice when somebody gets back to us.

I hope that the following answers some of your questions and clarifies some issues. With specific regards to the Soursop Elixir that you had: the batches; there is only one batch. Making soursop elixir is a huge amount of work compared to some of the other elixirs we make and because of that we only ever made one batch, once we finish drinking or selling it, we will not make any more. This means that if you or anyone had tasted a previous bottling you are now still tasting the same batch. The elixir is stored in 6.5 gallon carboys and sealed until bottling is required. It is allowed to age in the carboy with repeated rackings to clarify it (soursop takes a long time to become clear) every three to six months. The soursop you had at this stage has aged for four years and next year will be bottled as a special 5 year reserve (until it runs out).

I am surprised at your comment that you cannot taste the soursop flavour. The only thing that I can think of saying is that the maturation process has mellowed the in-your-face flavour of fresh soursop and as I am tasting some of the elixir right now I can discern a honey-flowery aroma with hints of butterscotch. The flavour hits the front of the tongue first…sweetness with very mild banana and some passionfruit and then moves to the back with the heat of alcohol and some very subtle bitter, like orange pith. The heat then passes into the belly while the whole tongue is covered quite unctuously. I would not mix it with anything as the flavour is too subtle and I would drink it warm (room temperature) in a brandy snifter in slow sips over half an hour to forty-five minutes. That would be my tasting opinion. I would hazard a guess that other soursop liqueurs you might have tasted are a different drink made with a different technique and maybe not aged as long. I am quite sure that the flavour is different if you tasted an earlier bottling and are comparing but I would add that the flavour has improved and matured with the aging. I am also surprised that you think it tastes like grappa; grappa is a completely different drink, a distillate, usually with the unmistakable flavour of fusil oils still in it, drunk from a small glass in one go. It is really quite the opposite of drinking the soursop elixir.

So, to answer your questions: yes, it is the same batch; yes, we taste it all the time and love it; no, it is not possible that the recipe has been changed because it is the original material. No, seeds were not used and neither were leaves, only ripe pulp with the seeds strained out is in this batch.

Now, the most interesting part that you have mentioned is the elixir’s effect on sleep. I never noticed that before but I will look out for it specifically now that you have mentioned it. I am wondering if the aging process has produced some soporific substance within the chemical reactions that occur during maturation. Thank you specifically for that piece of feedback, we will look into it as such an effect would allow us to use this elixir directly as a natural medicine alternative for insomnia……..

}

I hope this is helpful to other people that have tasted our Elixirs and answers some questions that everybody is likely to have.  The important thing is that we got to have a tasting!!  Yum, yum!