There’s a time of year that I for one have traditionally come to dread. It’s marked out for all to see in the fruit and veg in the local greengrocers.
I’m talking about the arrival of truckloads of persimmons.
Persimmons have no reason to resist extinction. No more reason do they have to exist, than do chokoes. Yes, they are cheerfully orange at a grey time of year and yes, they have a squishy texture. But they have a dreadful mouth feel – not unlike something hacked up from a lower lobe of a diseased lung. And they have a more-or-less total lack of flavour. Sorry, I meant to say that they have a very delicate perfume, quite reminiscent of Clag glue – that favourite staple of my early school years.
Not far behind the persimmons we notice the mandarins. I personally have no axe to grind with mandarins. Except the ones that have a seed content approaching 87%. I quite like the mandarin zest that accumulates under the fingernails, the sticky fingers and the bucket load of skin one needs to dispose as part of the after-lunchtime ritual. Or not.
There are of course pomegranates to widen the choice of inedible fruit during the colder months. Pomegranates remind us that we are a culturally diverse nation, doffing our hats to Persia, North Africa and the Middle East. And like the inhabitants of those climes, they bring colour and texture to our otherwise bland Anglo fare. But they bring seeds. Man oh man, they are a seed-rich experience
And quinces – that intriguing cross between apples and rocks. Thirty cents and the greengrocer will fill up the boot of your car with quinces – because they are a such a sought-after delicacy. As an alternative, you might consider drying them and using them as a carbon-neutral source of bio-fuel. Or road base. Strangely, quince paste is sometimes flogged as an antidote to blue cheese. The idea being that one smears some on a cracker, followed by blue cheese and then (incredibly) it’s supposed to be OK to eat. In my experience, quince paste makes an excellent emergency alternative to axle grease and should be part of every caravanner’s kit. Particularly if the tub is inexplicably lost interstate.
So what do these phoney pretenders to green-grocer shelf-space have in common ? Answer: they need to have the absolute bejesus stewed out of them with the addition of two thirds of the Bundaberg sugar crop to be made into the kind of preserves that jostle for space up the back of the fridge behind the coleslaw. And compete, unsuccessfully with the rock of the school fete – Lemon Butter.
In recent years we’ve seen the arrival of new exotic fruit. I’m mindful of the dragon fruit – with lovely red, triffid-like skin and fruit with the flavour and texture of jellied sand with black sesame seeds thrown in by way of contrast.
What to do ? It’s depressing to wander the aisles of the green grocer in the months lacking an “r”. Best to stay away for a while. I prefer to go for mainstream preserves during the discontent of our winter. I eke out a meagre existence on Poire William or Calvados, maybe Slivovitz, and Kirsch – at a pinch, Vodka citron. Sometimes I even resort to eating Californian pesticides harvested and imported as heavily disguised navel oranges or ruby red grapefruit.
In a desperate attempt to make it through to the first mango of the season, I sometimes revert to purchasing chestnuts – a relative newcomer to the Australian green grocery. These can sit in the pantry for months until the first mango of the new season arrives, pristine, in its orangey-red hugeness direct from the mango fields of the Northern Territory. Like the first swallow returning to Capistrano, this mango is not for eating. The five dollar price tag covers just the transport cost. Flavour and texture are not included in the price. Colour, yes, but flavour and texture, no way.
But the chestnuts are divine. Not for eating, for reminding one of the romance of roast chestnuts in the snow on the Champs Elysees. I recommend that you do remember them this way – even if you have never been to Paris, I can faithfully report that winter fruit does not get better than this.
Purchase enough chestnuts to pan roast for two people. That would be two chestnuts. Then leave them in the pantry until the first stone fruit of the new season appears – and – throw the chestnuts out – saving you the trouble of third degree lacerations from trying to peel them, or third degree burns in the unlikely event that you CAN peel them and inadvertently put one in your mouth. Oh, and if you’ve made it this far with the chestnuts, they will have a texture and a taste not unlike pencil erasers – completing (with the persimmon-Clag combination) the daily double of infants’ school taste reminiscences.
Not a good memory, but a memory, none-the-less. Glad to have one.
This was first Published by the ABC at Unleashed – Christ knows why – they disappeared it totally – after just three days …..
This version has the spelling mistakes fixed and a better photo.

I’ve been thinking about this and I just don’t want to appear in any way fruitist or vegetablist, but least of all do I wish to appear Persimmonist, so I’m saying nothing; except to note that when I last visited Fairbridge about 2 years ago, the place is run down now, the buildings all decaying back into the rocky ground, I was very impressed by a huge Choko vine that seemed to have made its home in the crumbling concrete of an old septic tank and almost completely covered an old storage shed. It must have been about all that was holding the crumbling ruin up. So I’ll have nothing said against Choko’s. Besides my Mum, may the Universe bless and keep her, used to make all manner of things from Choko’s. She claimed that the worst thing you could do to a Choko was boil it. The rest was just imagination.
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Coincidentally I have half a persimon currently dessicating on one of my horizontal surfaces; Abner left it for me to try when he came over to jam and I haven’t felt like eating it yet… and the possibility seems to be increasingly unlikely.
Chestnuts aren’t so bad; the trick is to eat them hot; I remember eating them in Picadilly Circus straight from a hot brazier… a big paper bagful for only a shilling… The trouble is, of course, that, much like bean sprouts in a chow mein or a chop suey, they go cold almost immediately you remove them from the heat. The first couple are lovely and hot and juicy, if rather flavorless; and after that they taste much as you describe…
HORSE-chestnuts, on the other hand are a different story; a story of me and my three brothers going to a rookery where there were dozens of horse-chestnut trees to collect conkers and playing in a haystack on the way home one summer evening; to be soundly belted and sent to bed early without any tea because unbeknownst to us, we’d caused 200 pounds’ worth of damage; the farmer caught us and drove us all home; except for Ian, who escaped a thrashing by playing the innocent… but we got him the next day anyway! Memories!
Hilarious piece Emmjay; had me laughing out loud; the neighbours probably think I’m a real lunatic!
😉
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Think you are a lunatic?
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…but only when the moon is full.
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There IS a reason and justification for the continued existence of the choko.
There is no better, cheaper AND bio-degradable missile to hurl at the neighbours’ dogs.
The mature choko not only fills the palm of the hand in a most satisfactory manner, allowing increased accuracy in the manual hurl but experimentation has demonstrated that they’re also superbly appropriate for use in siege engines (catapaults, springalds or petraries – trebuchets would be over-egging that particular pudding).
The major disincentive is that unless one scores an absolute blinder of a first strike, the dogs learn to dodge as soon as they can see you loading the engine – but a good hit will knock the four-legged perambulating bags of excrement base over apex several times and raise a wonderfully soothing howl of lamentation.
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Tomo! So nice to see you here! Merv, A pint of Trotters for my unleashed friend!
You know, the Chinese had a small, handheld, lever-operated ‘trebuchet’ for which chokoes would have been perfect ammunition; I believe these smaller trebuchets were also later used in Europe to supplement their heavier counterparts, as ‘small artillery’ fire.
I find cats a more challenging target than dogs however…
😉
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Don’t mean to skite, but have scored a direct hit with a non-biodegradable rock.
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Cool thumbnail Tommi. I’d like to see that one at a larger size.
Sorry Gravatar, yes? (ya see I’m down with the digital stuff. I mean really down….)
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It’s the one I use at my 3D graphics forums where it’s usually at 80×80 pel or larger. I have a full-size version (1620×1280) but uncompressed that’s over 1Mb to post. I use a different one as a logo on the images and yet another at the gaming sites.
If you can get to Usenet and care to nominate a binaries newsgroup, I’d be happy to post a selection of my works – but I’m NOT going to the hassle of setting up and maintaining a web page. Too many attacks.
Thought about it and I might yet do one with the x-rays of my surgery and 3 month horse-piddle stay but I have other higher-priority tasks in hand at the moment. Can post on Usenet, though.
And please, Tomo, not Tommi. A samurai tomcat, not a pinball wizard or Finnish rally driver.
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Hi Tomo.
Of course, your work is welcome here at the pub !
Regards,
Emm
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As you say Tomo, my apologies. I should have recognised the etymology.
And yes. EmmJay and Tomo you two should get together and post some of Tomo’s work here. I enjoy a good digital image, some cgi and animation perhaps.
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Ah, the humble choko. Isn’t that what they put into apple pies.
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We used to have them steamed with a dob of butter and a glass of water for our tea, try and tell young kids these days and they just don’t believe ya
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Too close to home that one Hung.
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Oh Hung, served like that, they were the side dish to the boiled tripe in Clag errr… white sauce.
A fine emetic but not a gustatory delight.
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It wasn’t really that bad. My early years was spent in New England. Mum and Dad were poor but happy. Choko was free and it filled you up. Steamed with a meal of meat and potatoes it wasn’t to bad.
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Fruit is in the eye of the beholder. Now here is some controversy, tomatoes fruit or vegetable?
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My two cents worth: Tomatoes have seeds, are part of the reproductive cycle of the plant. Hence are fruit. Babies – fruit of the womb. Sperm / semen = baby batter.
Which takes us back to the cooking blog…… eeew !
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Cucumbers have seeds. Pumpkins have seeds….
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Fruit.
Ah, but the carrot ! Veggie. Spud ? Veggie
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‘Baby Batter’, love it. Is this similar to ‘shaking white, hot coconuts from the veiny tree of love’, or, ‘conducting one’s solo symphony’?
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Fell out of chair. Calling Mirth Emergency Rescue
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Seriously, fruits are defined as the seed bearing structure which is derived from the ovary of a flowering plant. The differentiation between fruit and vegetables is a social construct.
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Told you it would be controversial
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It comes across as a rather strange topic!
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‘Baby batter’? Hmmmm never had fried baby… what’s it taste like?
😉
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Chicken, apparently 🙂
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Have we flogged this line enough yet?
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Disappeared from UL like a couple of kilos of prawns at Joe Hockey’s place.
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When you said “kilos”, did you really mean “truckloads” ?
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Didn’t want to appear mean!
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Any thoughts on Breadfruit emm
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Algy, I think they might be apocryphal. I’m pretty sure the last ones went down on the Batavia – not in the sense of fellatio, you understand 🙂
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NOPE! I can emphatically deny the apocryphality of breadfruit trees!
Breadfruit trees DO actually exist… there is at least one specimen in the Adelaide Botanic Gardens; the fruit doesn’t look particularly edible, however and I sorta had the feeling that the gardeners might be a little bit peeved if I were to try to pick one of these HUGE fruits… They looked huge and tough with a skin that looked like it would be as tough as some of those big blue pumpkins to get through… but I dunno; maybe there like many Aussie blokes and have a ‘soft centre’…
They’ve also got a poor little Wollemi pine imprisoned in a cage… saddest thing I ever saw; a tree in a cage…
😉
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Why would you cage a tree, it’s not like its going to run away or anything.
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In actual fact, Algernon, the tree is in ‘protective custody’; the Wollemi pine is extremely rare; they have only just recently been discovered as still in existence; previously it was only known from the fossil record. Cuttings and seeds were taken and spread about Australia in an effort to preserve the species. While it is still in its youth it is very vulnerable to vandals and the Botanic Gardens are worried for its safety… but it’s still sad… (I’m assuming it is still in its cage; it’s been a while since I visited it)
😉
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I just loved “apocryphality”! Burnin’ T, absolutlely aflame!
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Rule 1 – if you want it done right ….. do it yourself !
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