Today it is the turn of the cashew nut, a native of the
part of the New World that includes what is now Venezuela and Brazil. The first mention in print comes from our old friend,
the adventurer and privateer, William Dampier, in 1703:
“The Cashew is a Fruit as big as a Pippin, pretty
long, and bigger near the Stemb than at the other end‥.The Seed of this Fruit grows at the end of it; 'tis of an Olive Colour
shaped like a Bean.”
The Oxford English Dictionary has this to say on the cashew tree:
“ ... a large tree (Anacardium occidentale) cultivated in
the West Indies and other tropical countries, bearing a kidney-shaped fruit
(cashew-nut) placed on the end of a thickened fleshy pear-shaped receptacle
(cashew-apple), popularly taken for the ‘fruit’. The shell of the nut consists
of three layers, of which the middle one contains an extremely acrid black oil,
which is rendered harmless by roasting the nuts before eating. The oil is
sometimes used in India to protect floors from the attacks of white ants. The
receptacle has an acid flavour.”
This acrid oil had another, rather
alarming use, according to by Maria Woodley Riddell, the author of Voyages to the Madeira and Leeward Caribbean
Islands (1792). She says:
“At the top of the cherry [the fruit] grows a
naked seed, shaped like a sheep's kidney, called the cashew-nut; the kernel is
eaten when roasted, and has a very fine flavour. It is enveloped with a thin
shell that contains an oily inflammable fluid, which is very caustic. The
ladies in the West India islands make use of it to extract the freckles from
their faces. They sometimes spread it all over their hands, neck, and face;
and, in a few days, the skin peals off in great flakes, after which the
complexion appears for some time exquisitely fair, but is more liable to
sunburn than ever; beside the pain of this operation is excruciating.”
Uses of the cashew were still being
explored in the nineteenth century. The author of Our Viands (1893) says: “The cashew nut, also a product of the West
Indies, strongly resembles the walnut, and is much used in flavouring various
dishes. In India and the Philippine Islands it is roasted in the husk and eaten
with salt, and the husk itself produces an indelible stain used in the
manufacture of marking ink, and also for burning warts and ulcers.”
The ‘fruit’ itself is virtually
unknown outside of the areas where the cashew is grown. It is highly
perishable, but contains a refreshing juice which can be sucked or squeezed
away from the fibre; it may be preserved in syrup as any other fruit; it may be
used for animal fodder’ and of course, it may be fermented and distilled to
make an alcoholic beverage such as the feni
of Goa, in India.
As for the cashew nut itself, one of its earliest
culinary uses was as an addition to chocolate– the two ‘nuts’ being ground up
together to make an excellent drink. Recipes for the nut are difficult to find
in early cookery books - they are most often mentioned as an acceptable
substitute for other nuts. Here is one that specifies the cashew:
Cashews à la Diable (Acajoux à la Diable)
Take some
cashew-nuts, allowing about a dozen to each person, and throw them into some
clarified oil or butter in a
stewpan, and fry them till a nice golden colour; put them into a strainer to
drain from the oil, season with a little coralline pepper and salt, dish them
up on a dish paper, and serve for hors d’oeuvre, savory, or dessert.
Mrs.
A.B. Marshall’s Larger Cook Book of Extra Recipes (London, 1891)
Quotation for the Day.
Mellow nuts
have the hardest rind.
Sir Walter Scott.
Philippine pili nuts from the Bicol region in the Philippines is a great Filipino or Philippines food orsnack. Pili nuts are very healthy and nutritious indeed, being a source of energy, potassium and iron.They also have protein, dietary fiber / fibre, and calcium as well as monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats. I know they have no cholesterol, no trans fat, and the unsalted ones have no sodium. What is great about the pili nut snack or treat is that they are so crisp, rich, and delicious.
ReplyDelete