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Pawpaw: In Search of America S Forgotten Fruit
Pawpaw: In Search of America S Forgotten Fruit | Andrew Moore
2 posts | 2 read | 4 to read
The largest edible fruit native to the United States tastes like a cross between a banana and a mango. It grows wild in twenty-six states, gracing Eastern forests each fall with sweet-smelling, tropical-flavored abundance. Historically, it fed and sustained Native Americans and European explorers, presidents, and enslaved African Americans, inspiring folk songs, poetry, and scores of place names from Georgia to Illinois. Its trees are an organic grower s dream, requiring no pesticides or herbicides to thrive, and containing compounds that are among the most potent anticancer agents yet discovered. So why have so few people heard of the pawpaw, much less tasted one? In Pawpaw a 2016 James Beard Foundation Award nominee in the Writing & Literature category author Andrew Moore explores the past, present, and future of this unique fruit, traveling from the Ozarks to Monticello; canoeing the lower Mississippi in search of wild fruit; drinking pawpaw beer in Durham, North Carolina; tracking down lost cultivars in Appalachian hollers; and helping out during harvest season in a Maryland orchard. Along the way, he gathers pawpaw lore and knowledge not only from the plant breeders and horticulturists working to bring pawpaws into the mainstream (including Neal Peterson, known in pawpaw circles as the fruit s own Johnny Pawpawseed ), but also regular folks who remember eating them in the woods as kids, but haven t had one in over fifty years. As much as Pawpaw is a compendium of pawpaw knowledge, it also plumbs deeper questions about American foodways how economic, biologic, and cultural forces combine, leading us to eat what we eat, and sometimes to ignore the incredible, delicious food growing all around us. If you haven t yet eaten a pawpaw, this book won t let you rest until you do."
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SqueakyChu
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I admit that I‘m a #pawpaw fanatic so I took this book out of the library with the idea of browsing through it. Nope! I‘m going to read every word of it. It is fascinating! Yes, I do have my own fruiting pawpaw tree. 😃

SamAnne I covet a paw paw 2y
Aimeesue I had my first taste of paw paw this year! My daughter works at a State park and there are a couple in the park, so she brought a couple home to try. How fortunate to have a tree - I hear they're hard to grow from seed! 2y
SqueakyChu @Aimeesue My tree took two years to germinate and eight years after that to produce fruit! We‘ve had lots of fun with it. (edited) 2y
SqueakyChu I bailed because this was a library book which I need to return. I liked this book very much, though. 1y
15 likes4 stack adds5 comments
review
LindseysLibrary
Bailedbailed

There hit a point where I thought, “Shouldn‘t this be over?” I felt like the author stretched a subject that could have been written in way, way fewer pages (and with much bigger font—or are my eyes just getting old?) and still made all the same points and shared the same facts.

One good thing: I now REALLY want to try pawpaw! 😋