Pawpaw - Tumblr Posts

reading is #cool
Have had many pawpaws and can say, maybe a little banana-y? It's not a flavour I'd immediately associate with pawpaw but I could see it. I will say though that a good pawpaw is absolutely delicious. They're quite sweet and refreshing and melony. They're soft and bruise extremely easily, and they're lined inside by soft black seeds that you need to scoop away. The seeds are fairly easily cultivated I think.
Highly recommended. Good fruit.
So PMS-y and emotional right now that I just looked up pictures of trees and started tearing up because I just love trees so much.







đđtreesđđ
I have a fig tree and a pomegranate tree in my backyard and it may be the hardest part of this house to leave behind.
Pickinâ up Pawpaws
âPickinâ up paw-paws, puttinâ âem in her pocketsâŚWay down yonder in the paw-paw patch.â â Pawpaw Patch (folk song)
Iâm absolutely certain that one of the many lives Iâve lived was that of an early 1800s granny witch in the Appalachian mountains.
And because of that I have a love and affinity for one of the few uniquely native fruits to the United States - the Pawpaw!
This is a Pawpaw


An oblong, green fruit that comes ripe about the first week in September where I live in the northern most reach of its native range (pickle cucumbers and paste tomatoes in a five gallon bucket for scale).
This fruit has the texture of a banana/ripe avocado but tastes like a mango/banana. When theyâre ripe, they start to get soft like a banana and if you donât get them before they fall from the tree, youâre usually out of luck because as soon as they hit the ground they mush and bruise and EVERYTHING else gets to them first.
Anything you can make with a banana you can make with Pawpaws without changing too much the recipe. Pawpaw bread, cookies, ice cream, jam, jelly, butter and theyâre even used in fermenting for beer and moonshine! My favorite thing to make is Pawpaw jamâŚalthough itâs more of a preserve since I leave large fruit chunks in it.






Step 1 - remove the skins! , Step 2 - heat up in lemon juice so the seeds are easier to remove, Step 3 - REMOVE ALL THE SEEDS. This takes forever! This is a wild fruit meaning itâs not been domesticated to have small, manageable seeds. They have lots of large, black seeds that take forever to remove by hand. I have a food mill I could have used to help me out with the process but I was too lazy to dig it out of my canning supplies, Step 4 - heat up mash with pectin and sugar, Step 5 - add yummy fall slices like cinnamon and vanilla, Step 6 - can it!
If youâre thinking that Pawpaws sound delightful and Why Havenât I Heard of Them? The reason usually goes back to the undomesticated comment I made earlier.
Pawpaws are slow growing and slow to maturity, with each tree only producing a handful of fruits each year.

These are Pawpaw blossoms! Notice how theyâre a a deep maroon color? Thatâs because theyâre not a looking to attract bees or butterflies for pollination but flies! These blossoms, although pretty, bloom so early in the year that most normal pollinators arenât out yet to pollinate so they relay on insects that like dead things instead. Which means their flowers have to mimic the look and smell of carrion. Yes, they smell like rotting meat. Itâs not an over powering scent unless you stick your nose in the flower but still! Another huge hurdle for growers trying to have a commercial Pawpaw operation. Not to say some arenât trying, theirs plenty of active groups out there trying to get a domesticated cultivar for commercial growing but so far, no luck!

So for now, if you want to try a Pawpaw come to the Appalachians in late August, early September and find yourself a Pawpaw patch in the forest. Or come see meâŚIâll hook you up ;)

mappin pawpaws and the butterflies (Zebra swallowtails) who depend on them to see where their northern border is. it's somewhere between Northern Illinois and Southern Wisconsin, but where that line is exactly is very fuzzy
Pink is all the Zebra swallowtails, green is pawpaw trees themselves
The border here is changing now, because climate change and contemporary plant interest, but I suspect, and am looking for hard proof, that local Indigenous folks in the area moved pawpaw north of this edge more than is documented "officially"

Checking in with the local neighborhood pawpaws and theyâve still got some time to bloom. The oldest tree, somewhere around 40 years old, is furthest ahead
âŚin related news, itâs also the one most likely to be native to this exact spot and pawpaws only live 40 years!