Fruits and vegetables
All the islands of French Polynesia are of volcanic origin, what
created isolated and sparse islands, far away from any continent.
Thus most of the the plants that constitute today a diverse and
luxuriant vegetation were imported and acclimated by men in two
successive waves.
- Polynesian immigrants -who may have come from South-east
Asia- brought on their canoes the typical fruits of their region
that they needeed to survive during their long trip across the
Pacific ocean : banana trees, coconut trees, bread fruit tress…
Those plants are considered today by many people as indigenous.
- European colonists then brought many species that they
had gathered all around the world and acclimated them with success
to the Polynesian climate. That is why we can find today in Polynesian
gardens, orchads and moutains either European strawberries, African
watermelons, Brazilian guava trees or grapefruits from Borneo…
Fruits imported by Polynesian immigrants
Banana
Four
banana species in total grow in our islands, two of which are
indigenous to French Polynesia and can only be eaten cooked (fei
and meia), and two others introduced by the Europeans that
can be eaten cooked or raw (rio and hamoa). Except
the fei that grows widly between 400 and 1,000 m, the other
varieties are cultivated here and there in the littoral of all high
volcanic islands.
Banana trees trunk has always been largely used by Polynesians
: embarked on canoes during long trips, it was used as forage for
the animals ; notched, it produces an indelible sap ; used as fuel,
it provides the Tahitian hoven in vapor essential to avoid carbonization
; and finally its fibers are used for weaving. Its big leaves
can be used as tablecloth and as container to cook the aliments
in the Tahitian hoven.
As for the fei, it is greatly prized notably cooked in the
Tahitian hoven or prepared in poe, a sort of Tahitian
pudding served with coconut milk. Unfortunatly, the fei is
more and more rare today and is not anymore the food base of the
more humble people because of its price.
Citrus
What
is commonly called citrus in French Polynesia is actually a pre-European
variety named "lime" : it is the local taporo which
small and hardly spherical fruit is used to prepare raw fish. As
for the taporo popaa (foreign citrus), quite bigger
and elongated in shape, it was introduced by Europeans but it is
not very cultivated.
The local taporo is more resistant to insects and deseases
than the orange tree, however it was not spared by attacts and for
the actual production is lower than the demand, limes are imported
from the Marquesas islands or even from Australia. Nevertheless,
the local lime is a very important element in traditional medicine
since it is used in aproximatly twenty preparations.
Mape
The mape finds its origin in Malaysia and might have been
brought in French Polynesia by the Polynesian immigrants from South-east
Asia. This tree is characterized by foothills that develop
from roots to branches for the oldest ones. Boiled or roasted, the
mape fruit -that looks like chestnut- is highly prized by Tahitians
that eat it at every hour. Childrens are used to selling those cooked
fruits in all gatherings, notably around markets.
Nono
As
caviar was used to feeding chickens, nono (or noni)
fruits were given to pigs since an American company decided to use
it to make a flavored juice that is said to cure, or at least,
to prevent all deseases. The nono, that was once a wild bush
growing near the sea, is now highly cultivated in all archipelagoes
to provide this new and florishing industry. Thus, some cultivators
go so far as to uproot their vanilla feet -once the true "brown
gold" of the Pacific islands- to plant nono.
Formerly, Polynesians used the nono fruit to cure the stone
fish sting -a poisonous fish living in lagoons muddy bottom- or
to cure sore throats. Roots and bark were used to paint tapa,
a sort of vegetal cloth.
Breadfruit tree
The uru destiny is quite singular for it was the centre
of covetousness in the XVIIIth century. Considered as indigenous,
this plant was discovered in the Marquesas islands by the navigator
Quiros in 1595. After Cook's travel, the uru fame didn't
stop to raise in the British Empire : no sooner, the West Indies
planters asked for seedlings in order to produce for slaves a food
more nourishing than manioc and cheaper than rice.
Captain
Bligh, commanding the very famous Bounty, was charged
to collect some seedlings in Tahiti and then to transport them to
West Indies. The mutiny -that put an end to the expedition and was
made famous by films- was launched, among other hazings, by Bligh's
order to reduce the crew water rations in order to sprinkle the
young trees. Then, other expeditions were send and some uru
were planted in West Indies but they never had a comparable place
to the one they have in Polynesia.
Actually there are some 25 varieties of uru : rounds, oval,
smooth, rough… and the interest of this tree is not limitated to
its fruits since it is also a very used medicinal plant and its
bark permits to make tapa, a sort of vegetal cloth.
American fruits
Pineapple
The painapo, derived from the English word, find its origin
in South America and was introduced by the famous captain Bligh
that commanded the also famous Bounty.
It is today the more cultivated plant in Tahiti but above
all in Moorea where a juice factory has been built
in order to transform the local production. The Tahitian variety
is very thorny, but its taste is particularly strong and its yellow
flesh is really sweet and perfumed.
Papaya
The
origin of this plant is still unknown today since it was cultivated
for thousand years, but it was disocvered by conquistadors in
Central America.The fruit constitutes with banana one of the
more eaten fruits in French Polynesia for its production doesn't
know any season. It can be eaten raw with citrus juice, or cooked
notably in poe, a sort of Tahitian pudding served with coconut
milk.
It has also many properties : it can make freckles disappear applying
the pressed green fruit, or blood spots on cloth thanks to leafs
decoction.
Passion
fruit finds its origin in Brazil, Paraguay and Argentine and
has amazing hermaphrodit flowers and lianas which stems end
in tendrils. Its fruits are filled with an intense yellow matter
in which are spared many little black seeds. Among 20 comestible
species, 3 species of passion fruit are cultivated in French Polynesia,
notably to make a delicious juice. The round intense yellow
skin variety is very common but its flesh is often acid, whereas
the garnet-red skin variety is much sweeter and has a more agradable
taste.
Guava
was introduced in Tahiti at the early XIXth century from Brazil.
It quickly developed to the detriment of the indigenous vegetation.
However -as Polynesian people have understood it- this plant has
both many medicinal properties -since they added it to their
list of medicinal plants- and undeniable gustatory qualities.
Actually, the "sandy plum" -as Aztecs used to call it because of
its uncountable seeds- is the base of delicious fruit juices and
highly fine jelloes. Unfortunatly, this plant grows in steep
hills, difficult to acceed. As a consequence there is a lack of
labor and the production keeps falling down.
Asian fruits
Lychee and ramboutan
For
a neophit, it is sometimes difficult to make a difference between
those two members of the Sapindaceae family. Actually both
of them are characterized by a red envelop and a white
fruit which pulp sticks fermly to the stone.
The Chinese cherry fruit, more commonly called lychee, is the more
prized of the two fruits even thought it doesn't grow in French
Polynesia as well as its cousin the ramboutan since he prefers more
fresh climates. As for the ramboutan, it finds its origin in South-east
Asia and its envelop seems to wear sorts of sparks that doesn't
appear on lychee.
Orange
The first orange trees were introduced in French Polynesia by navigators.
The oranges that were produced then were so tasty that quickly,
Tahitian people planted it everywhere : either in coasts,
in valleys or in mountains. Unfortunatly, insects and deseases destroyed
many orchads around 1870 while more than 1,750 tonnes of fruits
were exported to California every year.
Today, wild orange trees only survive on isolated mountainous plateaus,
notably in the Punaruu valley (Tahiti) where they are the subject
of a ritual harvest in June.
Carambola
This
"star fruit" finds its origin in South-east Asia and was
given his name because of its five branches star shape when sliced.
Pretty acid, the juicy carambola fruit is not very prized and often
ends on the ground or eaten by birds. However, its medicinal
properties are still used today in Malaysia.
Grapefruit tree
From Borneo, this fruit was introduced in Tahiti in the early XXth
century and since 1930, the first trees produced fruits. In some
plantations, the Sarawak grapefruit tree even replaced the orange
tree introduced few years before and affected by insects and
deseases.
Today, it is one of the more common fruit of Tahiti and her islands
but its acidity makes it not very prized by Tahitians that still
prefer oranges. Thus, victim of overproduction, the more important
plantation of Tahiti has been replaced by a golf cours.
Mango
The
vi popa'a (foreign mango), in opposition to the Tahitian
vi, is from Indo-Burma and was introduced in Tahiti for the
first time in 1848. It was quickly adopted by Tahitian people who
used its trunk notably to build their canoes. After banana,
it is the most produced tropical fruit in the world where 300 species
are cultivated.
The different varieties that are cultivated in Polynesia don't ripen
at the same time what allows to find mangos all the year long. The
grafted trees provide much more tasty fruits while the other fruits
have a strong turpentine taste. Most of Tahitian people appreciate
the green fruit or or the fruit soaked with Chinese cherries.
African fruits
Tropical almond
This high tree is to be found from Madagascar to Japan, not to forget
Fiji and French Polynesia. This natural dispersal is dued to its
nut peculiar quality to float during long periods without loosing
its capacity to germinate. The "Indian almond" as it is sometimes
called has a better taste roasted than raw. Its leafs -that fall
down once a year- are used in traditional medicine and its
wood -that resists to water- in woodwork and shipbuilding.
Watermelon is a creeping plant from Africa. Two varieties
are mainly cultivated, especially in the coral belts that surround
Maupiti and Huahine islands. One is a small deep green rounded fruit,
and the other is bigger and more elongated with a mottled pale green
skin. Served fresh, watermelon is trully delicious and slakes everyone's
thirst.
Polynesian people also use its skin boiled in salted water to fight
the consequences of ciguatera, a desease that is transmetted from
algae to fish and then to men.
Vegetables
Taro
With
the fei -a banana that can only be eaten cooked- and the
uru (breadfruit), the taro is part of the winning
trio that was to be found on Polynesian tables before the Europeans'
arrival.
Actually, the tuber is very rich in starch and the young
stems (fafa) as well as the young leafs (pota) can
be eaten with coconut milk -as spinachs can be cooked with cream.
The taro can also be prepared as popoi : first,
the tuber is cooked and crushed ; then it is put in ti leaves
and can be kept during 3 weeks after the preparation.
Sweet potatoe
Since it grows easily and fastly, sweet potatoe is one of the
most cultivated tubercular plant around the world. Moreover,
its flesh -that can be pinkish, white or yellow- is very rich in
vitamins and minerals.
Nowadays, the former Polynesian varieties have disappeared to be
replaced by introduced varieties that are actually more productive,
more tasty and more nourishing.
Manioc
Formerly, manioc didn't exist in French Polynesia : it was imported
from South America in 1850. Sooner it replaced advantageously the
pia, which was traditionnaly used for its starch to prepare
poe -a sort of Tahitian pudding prepared with fruits and
served with coconut milk. Actually, manioc can grow in poor grounds,
demands few attention, prefers the dry season, moreover
its root can also be eaten -which is not true with pia- and
finally manioc is much more productive.
But since a few dozen years, manioc culture has been partialy abandoned
and starch has to be imported to provide the local market, thought
it is often more expensive and of poor quality.
Yam
Four varieties of yam existed in Polynesia before the Europeans'
arrival. One of the varieties, the ufi yam, gives enourmous
tubers that can reach up to 15 kg of weight.The main advantage of
this plant is its harvest period, during the dry season.
Actually, at this period of the year -from April to October- the
breadfruit tree (uru) doesn't give anymore fruit so that
yam permited locals to survive between two uru harvests.
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