The best kind of fruit is the kind that yields all of itself to the cook: flesh, skin, and seeds. If it can be used in savory or sweet settings, so much the better!
Enter the papaya, a fruit that can be sliced, sautéed, and served as a vegetable when green. You can scoop out the flesh and use the sturdy skin as a serving vessel for fruit salads, ice cream, or anything else that can be eaten with a spoon (a fork would rip through the “bowl”). The sweet, silky-smooth flesh can be included in salsas and salads, puréed into sauces and smoothies, frozen into ice cream, and freeze-dried into chips. Or you could add an interesting coolness to cocktails by serving them with frozen papaya-chunk “ice cubes.” (Mojito with papaya cubes, anyone?)
The seeds are edible, too, and resemble a cross between a caperberry and a peppercorn — they have the texture of the former and the flavor of the latter. You can use them as garnish or include them in dishes that call for capers, like baked chicken with a delicate stock-based sauce or poached fish set off with lemon juice and sea salt. Some cooks in southeastern Asia even dry out the seeds and then grind them the way we would grind peppercorns.
I think the best way to enjoy papayas, though, is straight off the spoon. Just cut them in half laterally, scoop out the seeds (you might want to leave a few in for contrasting flavor/texture), and then spoon out curls of sweet papaya meat.
Enjoy!
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Tags: breakfast, cocktails, dessert, papaya, seeds, serving vessel, snack



Wow! I love your principles, health, affordability and flair! Such a great way to put it. I would have to sum up my culinary explorations like that as well ( adding in vegetarian though!) I can’t wait to read more!