I looked around for a bit, and the only fruit I could find that I had never had was granadilla. I did a quick google search to learn a bit about it, and found that it looked similar to a dragonfruit or pomegranate on the inside (large seeds surrounded by pockets of fruit). Remembering my dragonfruit smoothie failure, I decided to try and find something at a different store. I still bought the granadilla though, just to give it a chance.
Next, I went to a local market called EZ Fresh. It has a lot of Asian foods, and there was a great many ingredients I had never heard of or tasted before. This is the main reason I decided to check it out. As soon as I walked to the produce section, I could smell a strong, pineapple-like, tropical sort of scent, and pinpointed it as coming from a huge weird looking...thing (at the time I didn't know what I was looking at). It turned out to be a jackfruit, and they were really big so I just bought a portion that had already been cut.
Jackfruits (Artocarpus heterophyllus), grow on trees in tropical lowlands, and they can reach a massive size, up to 80 pounds in weight. They are a major part of agriculture in India, as they have been for centuries, while in other areas, such as parts of Brazil, it is considered an invasive species. It is also the national fruit of Bangladesh.
The main reason I chose this fruit was the smell. It has a very strong tropical smell that reminds me of pineapple. The outside is kind of rough, and the inside is very fibrous, with pockets of fruit separated by the fibers. Each pocket has a large seed in the middle, which you can apparently roast and eat as a snack (I have yet to try this). The flavor reminds me of pineapple mixed with mango and apple, but the texture is more like that of a cantaloupe or honeydew melon. I'm not sure how juicy they are supposed to be, because this one wasn't very, but it was delicious all the same. I can still smell the scent on my hands as I type this half an hour later.
In my opinion, no cooking was needed, since it was so tasty to begin with, but there is a dish called Ginataang Langka that is made from unripened jackfruit cooked in coconut milk. It consists of the fruit, stewed in coconut milk with onion, garlic, shrimp paste, and long chili peppers, as well as meat (quite often pork). I'm not sure about cooking the ripened fruit, although I'm sure it would work as well on the grill as pineapple, and as I mentioned before, the seeds can also be cooked and eaten. We've all heard the saying "don't judge a book by its cover," well the same can be said for fruit. The jackfruit looks pretty ugly and unappetizing at first glance, but all it takes is one whiff to know its going to be delicious.
Work Cited:
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jackfruit
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