Cotidiano de uma brasileira em Paris, comentarios sobre cultura, politica e besteiras em geral. Entre le faible et le fort c'est la liberté qui opprime et la loi qui libère." Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

Mespilus germanica

This awkward fruit has become a fav of mine, ever since I first tried it in England a few yrs ago, for many reasons.

Obviously its taste is the first, most important reason. Getting over its appearance was not an easy task, though. It looks like a rotten apple -- when it's ready to be eaten. A fruit that's rotten before it is ripe, and is supposed to be eaten like this! I thought it'd be more than I could handle but in the end I managed.

Good, too, because it proved to be a singular experience. Something that tastes like a fruit and a nut at the same time has to be an efficient food...
Intriguing texture, unappealing appearance... and talked about in literature.

Can a fruit be more perfect and aberrant at the same time?

I often wondered why everyone and his brother go On and On Anon about peaches. OK, peaches are delicious, and juicy, and pretty, and fragrant, and cute, round, soft, velvety-- but that's easy! Like finding a kitten playing with a ball of yarn oh so cute.

Find merit in a jackfruit, like Roy. I like to think of it as Nature's chewing gum.

Or in a medlar, like Shakespeare:

MERCUTIO. If love be blind, love cannot hit the mark.

Now will he sit under a medlar tree,

And wish his mistress were that kind of fruit

As maids call medlars, when they laugh alone.

O Romeo! that she were, O! that she were

An open et cœtera, thou a poperin pear.


OK, perhaps not the single most beautiful euphemism there ever existed-- not even Shakespeare's most subtle one, but still. The medlar is underrated, not as well-known as it should be considering how good it is, AND it has rude Elizabethan euphemisms to go with it. What more can one ask from a humble fruit?



1 comment:

Carl Johnson said...

It's a country fruit, as Hamlet might have said