Driving through Champs Fleurs early one
morning I saw a young lady selling small parcels of fruit, expertly weaving
her way through the traffic. The small clear plastic bag contained 1 banana, 1
pear, 1 apple and a peeled orange. That’s breakfast to many Trinis, more so
just before carnival. Less and less costume fabric means more and more dieting,
running around the Queen's Park savannah for assured carbon monoxide poisoning and grumpiness
borne out of hunger - “The Hangry Trini".
The
Ministry of Food Production has a lovely poster highlighting some 84 fruits
grown in Trinidad, in addition to some of the less well-known more exotic ones.
See link below:-
Fruit stalls can be found on most corners and by fruit stall,
I mean from 4 red bricks upon and a piece of plywood situated on the pavement with
the proprietor sitting on a pig tail bucket, to grand establishments along the
roadside. I particularly appreciate the neat stacks of pomerac in 3s, mango in
3s, Portugal in 3s, oranges in 3s…
Slight prompting of how sweet the pawpaw is was required here |
Fruit is consumed either as the main meal or as dessert or as a healthy snack during the course of a long workday. One small tip: don’t get into a taxi and start eating portugal unless you want to be cussed out for “smelling up” the car.
Grapefruit,
sapodilla, pineapple, bananas, balata, caimite, tipee tamboo, tamarind
|
Remember the NAR reign in the 80s? The National Alliance for
Reconstruction (NAR) was the governing party in Trinidad and Tobago between
1986 and 1991. Christmas without apples and grapes, but we survived it. Now,
these and other foreign fruits abound year-round thanks to an astronomically
high food import bill. But I digress…
Peewah |
Tableland for aromatic pineapples…Manzanilla for the sweetest watermelon. And mango? The National Mango Festival began in 2009 by the Network of Rural Women Producers, Trinidad and Tobago (NRWPTT). NRWPTT was formed in 1995 and is a national umbrella organization comprising a membership of over 60 small businesses and individuals. The network is committed to membership in the Network of Non-Governmental Organizations for the Advancement of Women, (with UN ECOSOC Status) Associated Country Women of the World (ACWW) (with ECOSOC UN Status).
The Tableland Pineapple Farmers’ Association also hosts an annual
National Fruit Festival in partnership with iTHINK Global Consulting Services.
People are
very much into juicing and superfruits now. I think there are hidden treasures
in the exotic fruits grown in Trinidad. I mean look at current status of the
once humble acai berry, Euterpe oleracea, which is mostly native to Brazil,
Trinidad and other parts of Northern regions of South America. It is the
superstar of anti-oxidants!
Acai palm with berries |
Although fruits in Trinidad are used to make jellies, jams, preserves, chutneys, chow, punches etc. they are eaten and enjoyed in the natural state, juices running down your arm and splashing you in your eye.
Chennet man! You forgot about chennet.
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