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      From chutneys to constipation: The culinary and other uses of tamarind in Australia 1787 – 1909

      2 June 2023

      Paul van Reyk

      TAMARIND FRUIT – Would some subscriber of the ‘Sunday Times’ inform me how I could make use of  tamarind fruit for home consumption? — E. W. Rockhampton, Queensland (1909).

      The tamarind has a culinary history going back many millennia in tropical Africa, to where it is native, and South and South East Asia. It is a leguminous tree which puts it in the same botanical family as      beans, soybeans, chickpeas, peanuts, lentils, lupins, mesquite, carob, alfalfa, and clover. Its name is derived from the Arabic thamar-ul-Hind translated as the date of India. It’s the pulp of its bean-like fruit – pods – that has the primary culinary use. The green fruit is rarely used being very sharp almost bitter. As the fruit matures the flesh softens to a brown pulp surrounding the seeds in the pod. The flavour of the pulp becomes sourer with a light degree of sweetness.  It is this quality that is used in food preparations.

      This article looks to answering E.W.’s question of what to  do with tamarind fruit. My sources are newspapers and magazines dating from 1803, digitised by the National Library of Australia for the online library database Trove, and from a sample of Australian cookery books published between 1843 and 1909 when E.W. asked his question.

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      Paul van Reyk
      My first essay on food was in Year 10 - people seemed to like it. It took me 56 years to come back to it, so I have a lot of catching up to do. My focus is on Anglo-Saxon settler culinary ways in Australia, roughly from the first days of colonisation to the 1960s - 1970s. I particularly write about stuff that has not been written about before but is very much a part of the Anglo-Saxon Australian table. I hope you enjoy reading as much as I do writing.

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