Hawaii
Related: About this forumMassive Hawaii taro root could be largest ever harvested
KAILUA-KONA, Hawaii (AP) A super-sized taro root has been harvested on Hawaiis Big Island. The 50-pound corm, which is the root of a taro plant, was grown on Aina Ahiu Farm in Hawaii Islands South Kona district and could possibly be the largest on record, West Hawaii Today reported Wednesday.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture says taro plants usually weigh between 1 and 2 pounds. This one including corm, stalk and leaves weighed close to 100 pounds. The current Guinness record is a 7 pound root grown in China in 2009.
Clarence and Nellie Medeiros, who harvested the plant, said it could feed about 180 people. The couple plans to submit the specimen to the Guinness Book of World Records.
The entire taro plant can be eaten, not just the root, in a variety of Hawaiian dishes from the staple poi to lau lau and squid luau, both of which include taro leaves. The bottom of the plant, the huli, can be planted again after harvest and the plant will grow again. We are replanting it with a purpose and to keep it going for generations, Clarence said. Our grandsons are putting the Huli back. It comes full circle. Different generations feeding the next generations.
https://apnews.com/article/oddities-hawaii-kailua-kona-us-department-of-agriculture-219a7c450fd3a24cd154aa1a585fead3
Karadeniz
(23,650 posts)left-of-center2012
(34,195 posts)Has a sweet taste with a sour tang,
somewhat like yogurt.
Fresh poi is sweeter but it develops a sour taste as it ages.
I've never had it so I cannot speak from experience.
Response to left-of-center2012 (Original post)
jfz9580m This message was self-deleted by its author.
Normanart
(283 posts)Tasty, nutritious, and nothing goes better with poke. Mashed potatoes are very bland unless you add some flavor. Aloha!