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Calabash

(Redirected from Bottle gourd)

iCalabash
Calabash:Green calabash on the vine
Green calabash on the vine
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Division: Magnoliophyta
Class: Magnoliopsida
Order: Cucurbitales
Family: Cucurbitaceae
Genus: Lagenaria
Species: L. siceraria
Binomial name
Lagenaria siceraria
(Molina) Standl.
This article is about one of the plant species by this name. For other uses, see Calabash (disambiguation).

The so called calabash gourd or vine is named after the calabash tree first discovered in the Caribbean as the tree called Crescentia cujete L. This is true calabash. The 'calabashes' made from bottle gourd, Lagenaria siceraria. The calabash (not to be confused with the calabaza) is a vine grown for its fruit, which can either be harvested young and used as a vegetable or harvested mature, dried, and used as a bottle, utensil, or pipe. For this reason, one of the calabash subspecies is known as the bottle gourd. The fresh fruit has a light green smooth skin and a white flesh.

The calabash was one of the first cultivated plants in the world, grown not for food but as a container.


Contents

Culinary use

The calabash is frequently used in southern Chinese cuisine as either a stir-fry or in a soup. The Mandarin-Chinese name for calabash is hulu (Simplified Chinese: 葫芦; Traditional Chinese: 葫蘆; pinyin: húlu) or huzi (Chinese: 葫子; pinyin: húzi).

In Japan, where it is known as kampyō, it is sold in the form of dried, marinated strips. It is used in place of seafood in a form of vegetarian makizushi (rolled sushi).

In Italian cuisine, it is known as cucuzza (plural cucuzze).

In Central America, the seeds of the Calabash gourd are toasted and ground with other ingredients (including rice, cinnamon, and allspice) to make the drink horchata. Calabash is known locally as morro or jícaro.

In India, it is known as louki or ghiya in Hindi, and sorakaya in Telugu. The tender young gourd is cooked as a summer squash.

The shoots, tendrils, and leaves of the plant may also be eaten as greens.

Other cultural uses

Sierra Leone (West Africa)

Very typical in households in Sierra Leone and West Africa as a whole.The Calabash is hollowed out and dried. Used to clean rice, carry water and also just as a food container. Smaller sizes are used as bowls to drink palm-wine. It is also used by some muscians as a kora.

Mexico

In many rural parts of Mexico, the calabash is dried and carved hollow to create a bule, a gourd used to carry water around like a canteen.

South America

In Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Brazil, calabash gourds are dried and carved into mates, the traditional container for the popular caffeinated tealike drink (also called mate) brewed from the yerba mate plant.

China

The wu luo, or calabash, is an ancient remedy for health. In the old days the doctors would carry medicine inside so it has fabled properties for healing. The wu luo is believed to absorb negative earth-based qi (energy) that would otherwise affect health and is a very traditional Feng Shui cure.

Hawaii

Calabash:Calabash as container
Enlarge
Calabash as container

In Hawaii a calabash is a large serving bowl. It is usually made from a hardwood, rather than from the Calabash Gourd as in Maroon cultures. It is used on a buffet table or in the middle of the dining table. The use of the calabash in Hawaii has led to terms like "Calabash Family" or "Calabash Cousins". It indicates that an extended family has grown up around shared meals and close friendships. Food is very important in modern Hawaiian culture. "Komo E Kaukau", meaning "come and eat", it is the most expected greeting in a Hawaiian home.

West Papua

In West Papua, New Guinea, calabash gourds are used to make a traditional penis covering known as a koteka. The gourds are weighted with a rock while they are growing in order to make them take the appropriate elongated shape.

Categories


Vegetable-like fruits | Cucurbitaceae | Chinese vegetables | Arabic words | Persian loanwords | Pipe smoking

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