Alternative uses for Papayas

Remember when I wrote about my volunteer papaya tree?

How about them tasting like vomit?

Blech!

DSCF8557Well, as my papayas grow out and ripen, I’ve been cutting, smashing, or busting them open for the chickens to eat. The seem to like it, and that’s fine with me! At least I’m getting something useful out of the fruit. Its free, so I figured I’d just let it keep producing free chicken food, I hate wasting anything considered “edible”.

I’ve missed a few meals in my day, and didn’t like it. I’m a firm believer that nothing removes fear of unknown foods like hunger does. Since I’ve been hungry before, I almost never fail to try something considered odd by my upbringing. I’ve had tasty papaya before, but that papaya tree in my back yard and its vomit flavor is just too much for me.

However, on New Year’s day, I was introduced to green papaya salad, also known as “som tam” in Thai. Ridgerunner’s wife is from Thailand, and from time to time, she will let me try something considered unusual in this country that was a regular item in her homeland. Through her cooking, I’ve found that Thailand offers some fantastic cuisine, though much of it can be rather scary if you don’t have an open mind to food. Every New Years Day, she puts on a giant Thai buffet for their friends and family, where she makes all sorts of interesting, odd, spicy, and DELICIOUS foods. The green papaya salad was all of that.

Apparently, the papaya is considered a vegetable when green and a fruit when ripe. I never knew this. I was very interested when she told me of the green papaya in the salad. I expected a sweet dish, but found that it was far from that, being a salty, savory dish with plenty of hot pepper kick. I was hooked, even trying some made just for RidgeRunner himself with a bit of his home grown ghost peppers – that he eats regularly. That guy is an animal! Not sure how he can eat those all the time!

As to the green papayas, I have been kicking around the idea of trying one of mine in the same dish, hoping that when unripe, they wouldn’t have that offensive flavor. Tonight I was hard up enough for some variety that I tried it.

I’m a bit bummed now, after the result. I’ve fed dozens of those papayas to my chickens, when I could have been eating them myself. When green, they do NOT have that offensive flavor. In fact they more resemble a winter squash, sweet potato,  or zucchini than anything else.Shred the green papaya

I opted to make a green papaya salad of my own. I peeled the green papaya, then shredded the white flesh off of the outside. As I reached the interior that had color, I stopped. This left a core of lightly-colored papaya that I would feed the the chickens along with the peelings.

I then put two cloves of garlic, peeled and mashed, along with a dash of dried pepper flakes, and some black peppercorns into a mortarmortar and pestle and ground it all up with the pestle. (You do have a mortar and pestle, don’t you?) Once this was well ground, I added a splash of lime juice to rinse out the mortar, pouring the mixture over the shredded papaya. More lime juice was added, and then I then added a splash of olive oil, a splash of cider vinegar, and a dash of salt.  Mixing it well, I called the wife over.

 

Green Papaya Salad

 

We were happy with the end result, though it turned out nowhere near what we had tasted at New Years Day. We both agreed that green papaya has a LOT of potential, and we would be trying it in many different dishes over the next few months.

 

I hope the chickens don’t mind!

Peace,
db

 

 

 

6 comments:

  1. Green Papaya is also delicious grated and stir fried. If you get the Belizian Red Papaya you won’t be feeding it to your chickens! It doesn’t smell or taste like vomit – it’s actually very fragrant and delicious!

    1. I’m making a fritatta right now with ham and shredded green papaya 🙂

      And when I’m done eating it, I’m going over to RidgeRunners to get some more papaya seeds from his tee…I can’t seem to get any other tree seeds to germinate!

      I WANT some Belizian reds….just haven’t had any luck with seeds so far!

      db

  2. oh man! you are missing some key ingredients, fish sauce, tomato, and peanuts or cashews, and if you like (I do cause I’m a whitey falang) some sugar.
    My wife, from Laos, mashes everything together, including the green papaya in the Sok and Coke (mortar and pestle) which allows the papaya to soak up the salty sour goodness!

    1. A localized variety maybe? I get my Asian recipes from a Thai friend…

      Either way, I love the unusual (to a Hillbilly at least) flavors 🙂

      1. It’s a Lao recipe, but Laos and Thailand share so much around the border sometimes it’s hard to tell. I’m surprised that your Thai friend didn’t mention fish sauce as it is seriously in almost everything from Thailand. It is kinda, well… fishy smelling, but it grows on you if you like som tam. You can find it in most Asian stores.

        Another thought, Thai peppers would be a great addition to your garden if you like a hot pepper that won’t kill you. My wife eats them like we eat pickles.

        1. I’m sure fish sauce was part of it…but my wife hates it…and even though we have a bottle of it, I almost never use it, sadly.The wife has me trained to never see it in an ingredient list…

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