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Fruit Vendor Throwdown: Dancing, My First Persimmon and Knowing That Something’s Missing

November 23, 2010 Leave a Comment

Have you ever had an experience where it ends and all you think is “Huh…That’s it?”

Yeah, that’s kind of how I felt with persimmons, except, well, it wasn’t really a disappointed “that’s it”. Some people can take things so seriously. Sometimes all you’re saying is simply, “that’s it?” and it doesn’t mean that what you just experienced was bad, just that there could be more (quantity) or it just could have been better (quality). With persimmons, even though it was my first time, I knew this was not the ultimate persimmon flavour. Call it fruit intuition. It wasn’t fresh off the tree. It wasn’t local. It’d been picked in advance to ripen during transport. Its skin was tough to make it through the long drive. It was just sweet and mild, but I wanted intoxication. I wanted to feel as though the world had slid itself out from under my foot and I’d gone tumbling into a gravity-less void. I wanted sharp acidity mixed with honey-like (not sugar-like) sweetness.

The one thing that was perfect was the texture. There were two kinds of persimmons at my fruit shop and there were three ways I was instructed to eat them:

I follow directions well. Where fruit vendors lead, I will follow. Like a dance. So Leopoldo (whose name is not Leopoldo) told me to eat the smaller ones like an apple, I could eat them right away, and they’d be just a little crunchy. Then let a few more of them ripen a few days on the counter and they’d be soft and mushier, more like a mini-explosion of juice. The larger ones, he said, needed 2-3 days on my counter before they were ready. They should become soft and seem like a single puncture wound would be the end of them. Then I could bite into them and all the juices would seep out. Well I waited 2 days and I tried one. It was still a bit tough, but the very bottom was heaven. The top created a strange starchy coating around my gums and seemed under-ripe, so I figured the trick would be to wait another day or so. The next day the next persimmon was better and the fruit was half mushy and half thicker, soft pieces. These sections of fruit stayed together inside the mush and made for exquisite chewing. One persimmon was perfect with cereal because the juice gave the liquid the cereal needed, and the fruit sections gave the soft chew, so it was like two fruit in one (kind of like milk and strawberries – not taste-wise, just combination-wise).

I bought another 8 persimmons from my second fruit guy to compare. The grapes had been better, so maybe the persimmons would be too. Nope, they were exactly the same.

But then I ran out of soft ones and it got so cold that nothing was ripening in my kitchen, so I’m sitting around waiting for them to ripen and they never will. I’ve just been told that I should stir-fry them up with green beans, spinach or some other vegetable and since they’re kind of tough like I apples I think this might work. My two fruit vendors are locked in a tie, for now.

Next trial: fennel.

All Recipes, Everything Else, Fruit best fruit vendor at Jean-Talon market, jean-talon market, leopoldo jean-talon market, persimmons, tania fruits

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