If you're new to discovering this fruit then you're at least in my company. To learn about the cherimoya for me is to gain the knowledge that if things turned castaway I would search the island praying it had these growing on it. The fruit is not just delicious but also full of vital stuff as well: fat (none of it saturated), fiber, carbs, and protein. It is one of those fruits that's a meal which can sustain you.
On it's flavor; it is a combination of tastes which can only be described as cherimoya. It tastes like a pina colada if it were one fruit - banana, yogurt, vanilla custard wrapped in pineapple. It is an experience for sure. It can be blended with a tea, it can be turned into sorbet, eaten straight. I would not recommend heating this fruit as it would lose a lot of the qualities it is coveted for. It is a very impressive fruit which makes entertaining absolutely within everyone's grasp. It is at it's best raw, cooled and/or straight up. I do think it is a good raw dessert. A nice filling for a pie crust. A nice accompaniment to strawberries, blueberries and I'm sure others. It's a king among the fruits for sure. The wiki for Cherimoya.
I'm looking into some cherimoya ice cream!
Oat Flour Oil Pastry crust fresh from the oven
Cherimoya with yogurt cheese, ready to blend
For good pie crusts I recommend three kinds in order of favorite first:
1. An oil pastry. Which is flaky, delicious and alright for those avoiding cholesterol or animal products. My favorite being rolled oats blended in a food processor into a flour and using:
- 1 heaping Cup of oat flour
- 1 shallow cup of whole wheat pastry flour
- 1/3 Cup -1/2 Cup olive oil
- pinch of salt
2. A blend of oats, whole wheat flour, butter and sugar like a "crisp." Or brown Betty. Which is lightly toasted until crisp then fill with raw cherimoya or top the cherimoya after baking the crisp parts.
3. A raw crust of hazelnuts or almonds ground and blended with just enough of either honey, maple syrup, or agave nectar to bind the nuts and pat into a pan and fill with spoon blended cherimoya and top with other fruits.
Cherimoya seeds have a very high germination success rate and seeds remain viable for a few years after cleaning, drying and packaging (jar or envelope).
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