Hihihi
Guan?bana is a fruit used to make champola.
If you are flummoxed by all those big words don't despair, here comes the explanation. Introduce Underdog's tune here.
Ok, that green fruit that suarezn posted is a guan?bana. It is about the size of a large melon and the inside is white, chunky, firm and sort of stringy and the seeds are mixed with the edible part. I have absolutely no idea what its name is in English, or whether it's trully original from the DR. It is one of the lesser children of the Fruits God, a fruit of no significance. The only use I know its for making a yummy juice when you blend it with milk, sugar and ice. That juice is called champola, at least in my town.
Most fruits don't grow throughout the country, and being that I was born in a semi-desertic (sort of) area I am not familiar with a lot of fruits that grow here. But jobos I remember. There was a jobo tree at my grandmas and I would sit underneath and eat them. My grandma said it was pig's food, she might have been up to something there.
Another of my favorites is uva de playa. As a kid I would eat them untill my teeth and tongue turned purple. Or how about manzanas de oro. Those you can find sometimes in the supermarket. It is smaller than an apple, with a harder, non-edible skin and the seed reminds of a porcupine. Oh boy, I am getting tingly inside...
Hungry Pib
Guan?bana is a fruit used to make champola.
If you are flummoxed by all those big words don't despair, here comes the explanation. Introduce Underdog's tune here.
Ok, that green fruit that suarezn posted is a guan?bana. It is about the size of a large melon and the inside is white, chunky, firm and sort of stringy and the seeds are mixed with the edible part. I have absolutely no idea what its name is in English, or whether it's trully original from the DR. It is one of the lesser children of the Fruits God, a fruit of no significance. The only use I know its for making a yummy juice when you blend it with milk, sugar and ice. That juice is called champola, at least in my town.
Most fruits don't grow throughout the country, and being that I was born in a semi-desertic (sort of) area I am not familiar with a lot of fruits that grow here. But jobos I remember. There was a jobo tree at my grandmas and I would sit underneath and eat them. My grandma said it was pig's food, she might have been up to something there.
Another of my favorites is uva de playa. As a kid I would eat them untill my teeth and tongue turned purple. Or how about manzanas de oro. Those you can find sometimes in the supermarket. It is smaller than an apple, with a harder, non-edible skin and the seed reminds of a porcupine. Oh boy, I am getting tingly inside...
Hungry Pib
