When you use a knife or blade of any kind you make me cringe almost as much as my mom does, just sayin'. I'll bet that cleaver is really dull, that's even more dangerous.
@@dragos240alt It's highly likely that Hershey, PA does a similar thing to Disney World with manufactured scents being released into the air (I swear this isn't like a conspiracy theory, they really do that at Disney World). I've been there and it didn't smell like chocolate but it was the middle of the off-season for tourism both times I went.
You should try cacau nectar. They make it by putting all the pulp in a bag, poking holes in it, and then hanging it up so the nectar drops into a container underneath the bag. It's HEAVENLY!
That slimy consistency is very attractive to a baker who is interested in alternative flour ingredients. If that cacao pod was freeze dried and powdered, I wonder if it would be a nutritious alternative to certain thickening agents used to make gluten-free bread. I wonder if it would hold bubbles better than some other flour alternatives.
@@sadophyte831 oh I am such a mad scientist Baker I used to be able to get all kinds of gluten-free bread to work out and I've won contests in gluten free baking. I would so love to try this. Come to think of it I believe this might be ideal because if it's neutral flavor it would be ideal for a gluten-free chocolate cake recipe that had some substance to it. I'd like to try it for gluten free bread but I think I would not be able to resist baking a chocolate cake with cacao pod powder.
I don’t know when or how I became so interested in watching this channel...I am not a hardcore fruit guy by any means; however, I do find all of this guys fruit information really interesting!
I moved to Brazil 2 years ago and last summer i was fascinated about being able to buy cacao pods. i bought 4 big ones (the four for about 1 usd, i couldnt believe) and i dried the seeds. sadly i roast them too much because of my oven. the resulting chocolate was beautiful at sight but it just tasted like coffee, no matter the amount of extra sugar i added to try to save it. too strong to be edible. i was heartbroken. A tip to every people that try to make chocolate from cacao seeds. be very careful about the roasting. take them out when light brown because they burn easily.
Yes you are right for sure. I have a friend here in Hawaii that makes use of every part of the fruits he uses in his fruit stand. He has found many different ways to use cacao, mango, banana, and even Jaboticaba. He extracts the juice from the fruit and then dehydrate the remaining skins and seeds. The dried product mixed with honey and ginger in a tea is very refreshing.😊
Your face and descriptions of things you don't like are hilariously entertaining 😆 I have learned a lot watching your channel, whenever I try a new fruit I watch your review first
When I tried both Cocoa and Monkey Cocoa, both tasted like watermelon candy, and we're really good! With the latter having more flavor, and the former having a slight banana flavor as well
@@henrydickerson9776 there are plenty of nice non-militant vegans. They don't insult and obsess about other people, they just don't feel comfortable doing it themselves. The loud minority ruins it for everyone, as in most cases (like the disgusting Christian fundamentalist) and so on.
As for using the shell of the cacao pod you might try using it as a container for a baked filling like pureed spiced sweet potato or corn bread. I would first try baking an empty shell to see how it holds up after being cooked. Be sure to slice off a little off the bottom so the shell is stable and not liable to tip over. The cocoa nibs would be great for making chocolate beer which is regular beer flavored with chocolate. Using cocoa nibs instead of cocoa would give it the beer a more full bodied flavor and might win you an award in a specialty beer contest! If you want to use the shell as a thickener I would chop it up into chunks, dry it and then grind it into powder before experimenting with it. If the shell turns out to be a good thickener you could flavor it with powdered vanilla or chocolate and add sugar to make an additive to milk/milk substitute for a pudding mix.
Different cacao varieties have different amounts of the aril (pulp) around the seeds. While I don’t really agree with the criollo, trinitario, and forastero cacao variety labeling (for example, forastero is really something like over a dozen different genetic clusters including the famous “Nacional” variety), “trinitario” types generally have more pulp around the seeds. I’m not exactly sure, but the dryness/wetness may be due to different stages of ripeness, or due to the fact that the pod was shipped. When I was in Puerto Rico and tried cacao flesh straight from the tree, it was delicious, while when I get pods shipped to me it loses flavor and has a worse taste. I’m sure some breeder could breed some cacao purely for the flesh! It is interesting that other theobroma species (grandiflorum/cupuacu, bicolor/mocambo, angustifolium) are usually used for the aril and not the seeds, at least in their native countries in South America. Great video!
Mushrooms are quite different from plants because they have chitin instead of cellulose. They're both indigestible but cellulose draws in water so that's why plant fibers are useful (in reasonable amounts) for healthy digestion. Gotta be really careful with fungi, especially raw
@@zaneabrams7110 It depends on what kind of fiber too. Only soluble fiber dissolves in water, insoluble doesn't. It's usually too much insoluble fiber that can cause the most problems.
the pulp tastes somewhat of tangerine to me, you mentioned lichi and you are right. its somewhat like lichi but not as tasty mixtured with watered down tangerine. its kinda bland but its suprisingly tasty.
Because of you, I now eat the honeydew melon and cantaloupe seeds toasted with olive oil and a sprinkle of salt. Makes for a great snack - just like you said in your video about melon seeds.
I tend to make cacao wine with the pulp, while fermenting the beans, but yes mostly for roasting, cracking, winnowing, refining, filtering, aging & tempering. I use the husk for cacao tea. The tea is usually made with husks from roasted cacao beans. I sometimes use some chocolate liquor in the brew as well.
You can eat everything from jack fruit, you can eat the the meat, you can boil the seed taste kinda like potato, and you can eat the skin, but you have to remove the outer(hard part) and then you have to boil it with lil bit of salt, and you can eat it or you can fry it, taste good.
@@WeirdExplorer oh yeah I forgot to mention, you can cook the unripe jack fruit, try search gudeg, I know it uses meat and egg, but you can skip that part.
@@altimablossom yeah but like dont like actually give them to use it as a toy like if they find it and start playing it ok but what happens if they eat them or get it dirty then eat it, just give them a real toy and use the shreds as compost lol
I hadn't ordered anything from Miami Fruit up to this point because it looked like every box came with a cacao pod, and I had no idea what to do with it. After this video, I know how to deal with it now. Perfect timing.
My dad once brought me a bag of cacao husk tea from Ireland, of all places, and it's remained one of my favorite drinks to this day. I compare the flavor to a mixture of chocolate and honey.
I’m in Ecuador and just bought a gorgeous red pod for $1 at one of the fruit stands on the highway headed toward the Cajas Mountains. I came here to find out how to prepare my treasure. Mine is a bright red and not dried out like yours or some of the others I’ve seen on You Tube. As I understand, the yellow are more common here, but the red is more highly prized.
I Really Think You Deserve All The Patreon Support Possible!!! You Explain these Foods With a Clarity and Precision unparalleled!!! Foods We Otherwise Would Never know What they taste like. Thank You Sir!!!
Virtually everything makes good pig food... They'll eat just about anything, including feces and each other. When you slaughter a hog in the same pen as its sounder, they start trying to rip into the carcass as soon as it hits the ground.
I just got a cacao pod (along with many other fruits from Miami Fruit as a college graduation gift from my parents. Literally perfect timing for this video.) I can't thank you enough for your amazing content. It really grounds me sometimes.
They sell really good chocolate covered cacao nibs at Trader Joes. It has those beans chopped up into about the size of coffee grounds. It has a nice little crunch to it (quite a bit more than a Nestle crunch bar lol). It's really good.
Good initiative on this series! I find the food waste we make shameful. Things like radish greens, beet greens, and carrot greens are even rumored to be poisonous, seeds are chucked, fruits and vegetables are peeled unnecessarily, and so on. Really excited to hear a new way to use something that we'd otherwise toss. Even if it's not very good (eg. this pod), I like that there is a way to reduce the waste. As much as I can I try to turn vegetable scraps towards a stock to reduce waste and save money. Keep up the good work!
One of my favourite spice teas has cacao shells in it, combined with cinnamon, cardamom and a bunch of other spices, it's very nice. Also: that teapot is so pretty!
@@WeirdExplorer Made it on my own with no special tools. Fermented it for 5 days on a box, sundried it and toasted it in an oven. Turned out very good, although the cocoa had a hint of beer taste in it.
@@I.amthatrealJuan You probably didnt ferment to completion and also drying. Decades ago here in Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean , we had a cocoa industry. Its now morphed into small specialty chocolatiers mostly and probably exporting some to Hersheys etc...lol. The local food industry does produce a chocolate ( this is boiled ) to make hot chocolate that is truly fabulous with milk and spices. Delicious chilled afterwards to!
Interesting that you should mention tea made from the cacao seed husk. When we were in Panama we bought a bag of Coffee Cherry Tea. That's the husk around the coffee bean that's called the "coffee cherry". It takes a whole lot of them to impart any flavor to hot water, and it isn't particularly exciting, but I'm very glad I had the opportunity to try "Coffee Cherry Tea".
with the tea that you buy, it is from a roasted bean which will make quite a difference from the raw seed coat. Also try Manoa brewed cacao, one of the best (not nearly as bitter as crio brew) Also Blue Stripes Cacao from NYC sells cacao shell flour for baking.
Thank you for your review!!!!! I just got some cacao and I know I’m Jamaica we eat the fruit and sit the bean in the sun to dry and make chocolate with. I wondered if the pod was useful! Again I’m not convinced 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I do appreciate your review!
Why didn't you make jam from the cacao pod??? You literally showed a webpage that said you could do that, and then BOILED IT PLAIN, and were like "yeah it's got a lot of pectin, that's why it's slimy" lmao
Lol this is hilarious :). I just bought 8lbs of Cacao and I definitely will not be trying to eat all of it now. thank you for such a thorough analysis + demonstration
My point on the choclate drink . i have found a Dutch recipe of 1833 @ table spoons of Cacao powder 1 teaspoon of cinnamon . and 1 teaspoon of cansuger.. rest hot water (y) i did 150ml btw its my all time fav. and shold give a good amount of flavanoids as wel!
You don't need a knive to cut out the skin. Here in Brazil usually we just break it in half, just use a litte hammer, or smash it agains a counter, a rock or something hard and it will do the work. When it start to crack just pull it apart. It won't damage anyting.
I really enjoyed both this video and the prior one on the cacao seeds. Thanks for the links to order them! I’ll definitely have to try these, though I’ll probably pass on eating the pod based on your reaction.
Great video! Any idea how to store the fruit after it's opened? I have a fresh cacao pod I'm planning to open in the next day or two but I know my husband and I won't be able to consume all of the fruit right away. Any input would be awesome!
You are soo funny, I got my cacao and I was looking for the nutritional value info. I landed on your video and was not expecting to laugh so much. thank you!
I got some cacao fruit (dried & fresh) from Blue Stripes in NYC! So awesome... Blue Stripes is dedicated to utilizing the whole cacao fruit, rather than just getting chocolate from the seeds/beans.
It is also easy to sprout cocoa seeds as soon as you get the pulp off of the seed, the root starts to grow but be careful not to damage the root tip Also do not let the spouting seed or seedling get under 70° as they are very temperature sensitive.
I'm about to use my cacao seeds to impress some guests with my exotic foodstuffs, and you know what, after what you just went through, I think I'll just dry out the pod afterwards and keep it as a curiosity in my kitchen. Your face said it all lol! Thanks, though, your suffering was not in vain.
Theobroma sp isn't all too high in caffeine, but it is pretty high in theobromine like you said. A xanthine just like caffeine, it lasts longer but it a little harder on the cardiovascular system. A lot of people don't have a tolerance to theobromine like they do caffeine. I drink a lot of Ilex species, Yerba Mate, Guayusa and Yaupon. All of which have a good amount of caffeine and theobromine, as well as a little bit of theophylline. I would have probably breaded and then fried it like its cousin okra.
I finally now know why yerba mate made my heart race when I first started drinking it, despite having high caffeine and theobromine tolerance! Theophylline! Thank you! Took me a while to build up tolerance, I was too hooked on the yerba mate flavour to give it up.
I'm very judgemental on TH-cam videos but I have to take my hat of to you, in England that means I respect your video and how you look at the whole pod, I will use the skin for tea I'm tryi g to ferment the pod seeds never done it before I then need to dry it out if you have any ideas on how it's done in such a cold country like mine that would be great but once again, respect to you and your video
Wow, Thank you so much for all the info... You made my day! I had this fruit growing up we ate the skin with the pulp. I never ate the seed raw. My mom would roast the cacao seed and make DELICIOUS hot cocoa. Today I tried the seed raw for the first time, watching your video... lol. You made me LAUGH when you tasted it fried and boiled. Thanks for sharing. 😍😄
Great start to the series! The only thing from this video that I tried are the husks, we call them "cascarilla". I dont dislike them, but I'm not a big fan.
... If my mother handed me the rind of a cacao pod and told me to play with it, I would try to eat it if it was safe to eat. If it wasn't really edible, due to texture or due to inability to actually digest it, I would somehow dispose of it and go find a stick to play with. You could probably skip some steps and just toss the rind in your garden. I recommend trying to steam the pod like an acorn squash, that might make the whole thing - rind and all - easier to eat and more delicious.
In review The fruit 😁 The raw seed/bean 😀 (in limited quantities) The tea ☺ (it's different) The pod 😣 (maybe don't use the whole damn thing unless on a deserted island) Fyi all Jared's thoughts and opinions, I am solely providing a tl;dr lol.
there is also juice made from the flesh surrounding the bean. Just add water to it let it sit until it mixes with the water put some lemon or lime juice honey and some ice. put in the fridge.
I absolutely love your vid’s man! In the first video you at one of the seeds too, it was white inside and didn’t taste good compared to the ones in this video. Is there any explanation for this?
Also Check out:
-Original Cacao episode : th-cam.com/video/6ZbW9C9e-CM/w-d-xo.html
-Cupuacu Review (cacao relative): th-cam.com/video/4FcrUXoACfM/w-d-xo.html
-Cacao Seed Comparison: th-cam.com/video/v-kuaoWggHI/w-d-xo.html
-Chocolate Coffee Substitute: th-cam.com/video/cf-ofB-iVJU/w-d-xo.html
Really interesting 🧐
can you make ketchup out of the pods
When you use a knife or blade of any kind you make me cringe almost as much as my mom does, just sayin'. I'll bet that cleaver is really dull, that's even more dangerous.
I tried the fruit while I was in peru you explained the flavour exactly how I tasted it
Peruvians ( Andean cultures) eat guinea pigs ..go figure following their eating trends
The pods can be used as mulch. The town of Hershey in Pennsylvania does this and the whole town smells like chocolate.
I've been there and the town does smell like chocolate! I don't think its because of the pods though, those things smell like melon rinds.
I mean there is/was a chocolate factory there. It's probably that.
@@dragos240alt It's highly likely that Hershey, PA does a similar thing to Disney World with manufactured scents being released into the air (I swear this isn't like a conspiracy theory, they really do that at Disney World). I've been there and it didn't smell like chocolate but it was the middle of the off-season for tourism both times I went.
@@tissuepaper9962 OMG, pretty cool fact
@Classic Max maybe fungus is releasing chemicals that enzymatically breaks down phyto stuff into aromatic molecules, and food(for the mushies).
You should try cacau nectar. They make it by putting all the pulp in a bag, poking holes in it, and then hanging it up so the nectar drops into a container underneath the bag. It's HEAVENLY!
That slimy consistency is very attractive to a baker who is interested in alternative flour ingredients. If that cacao pod was freeze dried and powdered, I wonder if it would be a nutritious alternative to certain thickening agents used to make gluten-free bread. I wonder if it would hold bubbles better than some other flour alternatives.
I would love to see someone try this
@@sadophyte831 oh I am such a mad scientist Baker I used to be able to get all kinds of gluten-free bread to work out and I've won contests in gluten free baking. I would so love to try this. Come to think of it I believe this might be ideal because if it's neutral flavor it would be ideal for a gluten-free chocolate cake recipe that had some substance to it. I'd like to try it for gluten free bread but I think I would not be able to resist baking a chocolate cake with cacao pod powder.
@@sooobyrooo5763 hi, if you are interested in making it, it will be great to make a youtube videos out of it, I would love to see that!
@@bunyu6237 right on I'll keep that in mind once I get a film kitchen set up :-) thank you for the idea that sounds fun.
blue stripes cacao in NYC makes products with cacao shell flour.
The cacao had an insect-like appearance to it when you first opened it up, like you were opening up a giant bug carapace.
I thought that too....
I can't unsee it
Fallout Cazador Tail
I know, it's like eating a face-hugger from Alien.
Huh, a side channel where he eats bug meals from around the world.
Your eating the flesh around the seed reminded me, in a way, of the ice cream bean.
I remember that... or was that the ice cream banana?
@@hempwick8203 he ate both I think
I love to eat the flesh with the seed.
I don’t know when or how I became so interested in watching this channel...I am not a hardcore fruit guy by any means; however, I do find all of this guys fruit information really interesting!
I moved to Brazil 2 years ago and last summer i was fascinated about being able to buy cacao pods. i bought 4 big ones (the four for about 1 usd, i couldnt believe) and i dried the seeds. sadly i roast them too much because of my oven. the resulting chocolate was beautiful at sight but it just tasted like coffee, no matter the amount of extra sugar i added to try to save it. too strong to be edible. i was heartbroken.
A tip to every people that try to make chocolate from cacao seeds. be very careful about the roasting. take them out when light brown because they burn easily.
I think the cacao seeds need to be fermented also, that might have played a part too.
Yes you are right for sure. I have a friend here in Hawaii that makes use of every part of the fruits he uses in his fruit stand. He has found many different ways to use cacao, mango, banana, and even Jaboticaba. He extracts the juice from the fruit and then dehydrate the remaining skins and seeds. The dried product mixed with honey and ginger in a tea is very refreshing.😊
Your cutting is giving me anxiety
It's like watching a child open a watermelon with a sledgehammer.
seriously. How does this guy have any fingers left?
roflmaomaomao He ironically can swallow swords.
Me too.
Came to comments to see if anyone else thought this
Your face and descriptions of things you don't like are hilariously entertaining 😆 I have learned a lot watching your channel, whenever I try a new fruit I watch your review first
"Let me show you what it tastes like." Good luck with that, sir.
😂😂😂 this killed me for unknown reasons
@@stored6380 🔫pew
I do get the idea with his explanations
@@marieelisa1 🔫🦊🤘
Exactly my thought...
Hey, let me show you so you can see what sex feels like 😄
That tea sounds very interesting, had no idea you could do all this with the cacao pod. Great episode!
is it Tea tho if there's no Tea in it?
Heavy Question, I'm sorry.
@@Broockle I think it might technically be a tisane, tea is technically made from tea leaves like you mentioned.
When I tried both Cocoa and Monkey Cocoa, both tasted like watermelon candy, and we're really good! With the latter having more flavor, and the former having a slight banana flavor as well
I've wondered before why a vegetarian would need a meat cleaver. Now I understand.
There have been vegetarian serial killers.
Vegetarianism isn't bad. Vegans, otoh...
@@henrydickerson9776 there are plenty of nice non-militant vegans. They don't insult and obsess about other people, they just don't feel comfortable doing it themselves. The loud minority ruins it for everyone, as in most cases (like the disgusting Christian fundamentalist) and so on.
In my experience, even the non-militant vegans are a bit smug about it. Moby comes to mind.
"He only comes out at night, the lean and hungry type.Nothing is new. I've seen him here before, watching and waiting."
I was so worried for your fingers on that cutting part :D
obviously... the pod needs to be ketchuped
Most fruits do!
As someone who's tried mangosteen peel in the past, next episode is going to be a lot of suffering.
oh yeah it will be
As for using the shell of the cacao pod you might try using it as a container for a baked filling like pureed spiced sweet potato or corn bread. I would first try baking an empty shell to see how it holds up after being cooked. Be sure to slice off a little off the bottom so the shell is stable and not liable to tip over. The cocoa nibs would be great for making chocolate beer which is regular beer flavored with chocolate. Using cocoa nibs instead of cocoa would give it the beer a more full bodied flavor and might win you an award in a specialty beer contest! If you want to use the shell as a thickener I would chop it up into chunks, dry it and then grind it into powder before experimenting with it. If the shell turns out to be a good thickener you could flavor it with powdered vanilla or chocolate and add sugar to make an additive to milk/milk substitute for a pudding mix.
Different cacao varieties have different amounts of the aril (pulp) around the seeds. While I don’t really agree with the criollo, trinitario, and forastero cacao variety labeling (for example, forastero is really something like over a dozen different genetic clusters including the famous “Nacional” variety), “trinitario” types generally have more pulp around the seeds. I’m not exactly sure, but the dryness/wetness may be due to different stages of ripeness, or due to the fact that the pod was shipped. When I was in Puerto Rico and tried cacao flesh straight from the tree, it was delicious, while when I get pods shipped to me it loses flavor and has a worse taste. I’m sure some breeder could breed some cacao purely for the flesh! It is interesting that other theobroma species (grandiflorum/cupuacu, bicolor/mocambo, angustifolium) are usually used for the aril and not the seeds, at least in their native countries in South America. Great video!
I'm giving the peels as a toy to my kids for Christmas for sure! XD
this reminds me of the time I ate a bunch of shiitake stems and got a bad intestinal blockage. Be careful eating too much fibrous things.
yeah I can see this doing a number on your guts if you have too much.
The more fiber you eat the more vital it is you consume sufficient amounts of water for it to not suck up all the moisture inside your guts
Mushrooms are quite different from plants because they have chitin instead of cellulose. They're both indigestible but cellulose draws in water so that's why plant fibers are useful (in reasonable amounts) for healthy digestion. Gotta be really careful with fungi, especially raw
@@zaneabrams7110 It depends on what kind of fiber too. Only soluble fiber dissolves in water, insoluble doesn't. It's usually too much insoluble fiber that can cause the most problems.
There's an insignificant amount of fiber in mushrooms. They are largely chitin--like your fingernails and insect shells.
the pulp tastes somewhat of tangerine to me, you mentioned lichi and you are right. its somewhat like lichi but not as tasty mixtured with watered down tangerine. its kinda bland but its suprisingly tasty.
A good instructor.
Audible, eloquent, practical, innovative... Thank u
Love from Uganda
Because of you, I now eat the honeydew melon and cantaloupe seeds toasted with olive oil and a sprinkle of salt. Makes for a great snack - just like you said in your video about melon seeds.
I tend to make cacao wine with the pulp, while fermenting the beans, but yes mostly for roasting, cracking, winnowing, refining, filtering, aging & tempering. I use the husk for cacao tea. The tea is usually made with husks from roasted cacao beans. I sometimes use some chocolate liquor in the brew as well.
You can eat everything from jack fruit, you can eat the the meat, you can boil the seed taste kinda like potato, and you can eat the skin, but you have to remove the outer(hard part) and then you have to boil it with lil bit of salt, and you can eat it or you can fry it, taste good.
That would be a great one for the future
@@WeirdExplorer oh yeah I forgot to mention, you can cook the unripe jack fruit, try search gudeg, I know it uses meat and egg, but you can skip that part.
damn this man really said give the peel to your kids as a toy lmao
Kids love boxes and laundry baskets. So yeah. Give them the pod
My favorite part and lmao when he said that. I used to play with banana and cashew leaves so this suggestion isn’t too far off tho.
@@altimablossom yeah but like dont like actually give them to use it as a toy like if they find it and start playing it ok but what happens if they eat them or get it dirty then eat it, just give them a real toy and use the shreds as compost lol
😂😂😂😂
He’s funny. I like his sense of humor.
I hadn't ordered anything from Miami Fruit up to this point because it looked like every box came with a cacao pod, and I had no idea what to do with it. After this video, I know how to deal with it now. Perfect timing.
Hey kids, I have some cacao shreds, play with them! Hahahaha, nice video.
Jared, mebbe you should try roasting the pod, like one would do with acorn squash (since it was mentioned so often in that blog to which you linked).
My dad once brought me a bag of cacao husk tea from Ireland, of all places, and it's remained one of my favorite drinks to this day. I compare the flavor to a mixture of chocolate and honey.
Thank you for the video! I was looking for use of the husk other than fertilizer.
I’m in Ecuador and just bought a gorgeous red pod for $1 at one of the fruit stands on the highway headed toward the Cajas Mountains. I came here to find out how to prepare my treasure. Mine is a bright red and not dried out like yours or some of the others I’ve seen on You Tube. As I understand, the yellow are more common here, but the red is more highly prized.
God damn it, I was out in public while watching this and your scene shift to the blackened result of the "pod fries" had me laughing out LOUD.
I Really Think You Deserve All The Patreon Support Possible!!! You Explain these Foods With a Clarity and Precision unparalleled!!! Foods We Otherwise Would Never know What they taste like. Thank You Sir!!!
Pods would make good pig food probably
@@HighlanderNorth1 thanks
Chocolaty bacon! Genius!
Virtually everything makes good pig food... They'll eat just about anything, including feces and each other. When you slaughter a hog in the same pen as its sounder, they start trying to rip into the carcass as soon as it hits the ground.
@@jagoldenpyrenees491 why would you ever slaughter it in the pen?
I just got a cacao pod (along with many other fruits from Miami Fruit as a college graduation gift from my parents. Literally perfect timing for this video.) I can't thank you enough for your amazing content. It really grounds me sometimes.
They sell really good chocolate covered cacao nibs at Trader Joes. It has those beans chopped up into about the size of coffee grounds. It has a nice little crunch to it (quite a bit more than a Nestle crunch bar lol). It's really good.
That sounds extremely delicious.
14:24 This reminded me of that Kids in the Hall sketch, _Dignity._ "Let's boil the broom again!"
This is my type of video! (along with urban foraging ones)
I hadn't heard of urban foraging before !
Good initiative on this series! I find the food waste we make shameful. Things like radish greens, beet greens, and carrot greens are even rumored to be poisonous, seeds are chucked, fruits and vegetables are peeled unnecessarily, and so on. Really excited to hear a new way to use something that we'd otherwise toss. Even if it's not very good (eg. this pod), I like that there is a way to reduce the waste. As much as I can I try to turn vegetable scraps towards a stock to reduce waste and save money. Keep up the good work!
I usually set the shells out to dry, and use them to start plants in. Just fill the boat with dirt, and a couple seeds.
My kids went to show off with their cool new toys. Now they dont have problems regarding social distancing anymore.Thanks for the tip.
Love your content and how you're so willing to try new fruits and new things. You're a cool guy, different in a good way.
Your low levels of sarcasm are infinitely entertaining. One of my all time fave channels 🤟🏻
Those cacao beans actually looked super good. I really love fairly bitter dark chocolate, so that'd be right up my alley.
I love your humor!!!!! Peeling of the pod( “ just give them to your kids to play with”😂😂😂😂
I dont think I have ever seen you spit something out that fast lol.
One of my favourite spice teas has cacao shells in it, combined with cinnamon, cardamom and a bunch of other spices, it's very nice. Also: that teapot is so pretty!
The tea is called Cascara. And the coffee shop i work at has cascara tea on tap/nitro... its DELICIOUS
You should try to ferment the seeds yourself and make your own chocolate. That would be really cool!
Thought about it.. but it takes a lot of trouble and machinery that I don't have.
@@WeirdExplorer Made it on my own with no special tools. Fermented it for 5 days on a box, sundried it and toasted it in an oven. Turned out very good, although the cocoa had a hint of beer taste in it.
@@I.amthatrealJuan that's probably yeast
@@I.amthatrealJuan You probably didnt ferment to completion and also drying. Decades ago here in Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean , we had a cocoa industry. Its now morphed into small specialty chocolatiers mostly and probably exporting some to Hersheys etc...lol. The local food industry does produce a chocolate ( this is boiled ) to make hot chocolate that is truly fabulous with milk and spices. Delicious chilled afterwards to!
Cacao like coffee, is also a great fertilizer.
Nice. I'm really looking forward to this months videos. Thanks for your work!
Your Explanation Is Impeccable. You Are The Best!!! I Really Appreciate You and Your Talent. Much Respect!!!
Interesting that you should mention tea made from the cacao seed husk. When we were in Panama we bought a bag of Coffee Cherry Tea. That's the husk around the coffee bean that's called the "coffee cherry". It takes a whole lot of them to impart any flavor to hot water, and it isn't particularly exciting, but I'm very glad I had the opportunity to try "Coffee Cherry Tea".
I love cacao fruit! I have never actually eaten the fruit but I just think it’s so cool. Thanks for fueling my interest ❤
with the tea that you buy, it is from a roasted bean which will make quite a difference from the raw seed coat. Also try Manoa brewed cacao, one of the best (not nearly as bitter as crio brew) Also Blue Stripes Cacao from NYC sells cacao shell flour for baking.
Thank you for your review!!!!! I just got some cacao and I know I’m Jamaica we eat the fruit and sit the bean in the sun to dry and make chocolate with. I wondered if the pod was useful! Again I’m not convinced 😂😂😂😂😂😂 I do appreciate your review!
Why didn't you make jam from the cacao pod??? You literally showed a webpage that said you could do that, and then BOILED IT PLAIN, and were like "yeah it's got a lot of pectin, that's why it's slimy" lmao
Probably a heavy workload
Lol this is hilarious :). I just bought 8lbs of Cacao and I definitely will not be trying to eat all of it now. thank you for such a thorough analysis + demonstration
This was fun to watch! Great content! Found this video because I just bought my first ever cacao pod.
very cool idea for a series!!!! made me open mouth smile
My point on the choclate drink . i have found a Dutch recipe of 1833 @ table spoons of Cacao powder 1 teaspoon of cinnamon . and 1 teaspoon of cansuger.. rest hot water (y) i did 150ml btw its my all time fav. and shold give a good amount of flavanoids as wel!
You don't need a knive to cut out the skin. Here in Brazil usually we just break it in half, just use a litte hammer, or smash it agains a counter, a rock or something hard and it will do the work. When it start to crack just pull it apart. It won't damage anyting.
I really enjoyed both this video and the prior one on the cacao seeds. Thanks for the links to order them! I’ll definitely have to try these, though I’ll probably pass on eating the pod based on your reaction.
Don't eat it. I am back with a handful of delicious chilled chocolate chips 😂 it still counts.
Great video! Any idea how to store the fruit after it's opened? I have a fresh cacao pod I'm planning to open in the next day or two but I know my husband and I won't be able to consume all of the fruit right away. Any input would be awesome!
You are soo funny, I got my cacao and I was looking for the nutritional value info. I landed on your video and was not expecting to laugh so much. thank you!
glad you enjoyed!
nice start to the series. cacao is not something i've ever run across but i think it would be interesting to try.
I got some cacao fruit (dried & fresh) from Blue Stripes in NYC! So awesome... Blue Stripes is dedicated to utilizing the whole cacao fruit, rather than just getting chocolate from the seeds/beans.
I've been watching these for a long time. Idk if you've done this before, but you should do a Q and A video
yep! check the old live streams and channel update videos
It is also easy to sprout cocoa seeds as soon as you get the pulp off of the seed, the root starts to grow but be careful not to damage the root tip
Also do not let the spouting seed or seedling get under 70° as they are very temperature sensitive.
I actually roasted the seeds and stored them with sea salt it's a great little snack
Fantastically awesome idea for a series! Can't wait to see what you go over next!
I've been enjoying the series of using every part!
I'm about to use my cacao seeds to impress some guests with my exotic foodstuffs, and you know what, after what you just went through, I think I'll just dry out the pod afterwards and keep it as a curiosity in my kitchen. Your face said it all lol! Thanks, though, your suffering was not in vain.
Theobroma sp isn't all too high in caffeine, but it is pretty high in theobromine like you said. A xanthine just like caffeine, it lasts longer but it a little harder on the cardiovascular system. A lot of people don't have a tolerance to theobromine like they do caffeine. I drink a lot of Ilex species, Yerba Mate, Guayusa and Yaupon.
All of which have a good amount of caffeine and theobromine, as well as a little bit of theophylline.
I would have probably breaded and then fried it like its cousin okra.
I finally now know why yerba mate made my heart race when I first started drinking it, despite having high caffeine and theobromine tolerance! Theophylline! Thank you! Took me a while to build up tolerance, I was too hooked on the yerba mate flavour to give it up.
I'm very judgemental on TH-cam videos but I have to take my hat of to you, in England that means I respect your video and how you look at the whole pod, I will use the skin for tea I'm tryi g to ferment the pod seeds never done it before I then need to dry it out if you have any ideas on how it's done in such a cold country like mine that would be great but once again, respect to you and your video
Wow, Thank you so much for all the info... You made my day! I had this fruit growing up we ate the skin with the pulp. I never ate the seed raw. My mom would roast the cacao seed and make DELICIOUS hot cocoa. Today I tried the seed raw for the first time, watching your video... lol. You made me LAUGH when you tasted it fried and boiled. Thanks for sharing. 😍😄
My kids loved to play with the cacao skin . Thanks.
In my country, we eat the fleshy part of the seeds before sun-drying them. It’s actually good😊
Great start to the series! The only thing from this video that I tried are the husks, we call them "cascarilla". I dont dislike them, but I'm not a big fan.
The shells when toasted make a very delicious Atole.
I wonder if the pod could reasonably be dried and ground into a flour
blue stipes cacao in NYC does this
I definitely agree that fermented beans are not raw. That's like calling sauerkraut "raw cabbage" or pickles "raw cucumbers"
The chocolate tea can also be mixed with other teas to make a sorta spiced tea thing the same way you would add cinnamon to stuff
I've made it with ginger and cardamom and it came out great
How many “raw” straight from the pod after opening it can I add to a smoothie per smoothie daily or just eat raw?? Thx
You learn Something new everyday.
I'm thankful for your channel. great content
for the tea, would it be comparable to a barley tea with a chocolate component?
I can also use the whole fruit by adding it to a landfill and letting it be the organics that are very needed there.
I drink cacao husk "tea" everyday, sometimes I mix it with coffee
Incidentally lots of roasted beans make flavours like coffee (coffee substitues ), thats mostly the taste of a roasted bean
@@whiteknight7wayne493 can you give an example? I thought ersatz coffee was invented with the husk of various nuts?
... If my mother handed me the rind of a cacao pod and told me to play with it, I would try to eat it if it was safe to eat. If it wasn't really edible, due to texture or due to inability to actually digest it, I would somehow dispose of it and go find a stick to play with. You could probably skip some steps and just toss the rind in your garden. I recommend trying to steam the pod like an acorn squash, that might make the whole thing - rind and all - easier to eat and more delicious.
'It's got a little bit of a dried grass smell to it......I like it.' 😄
i really need to know if miami fruits sends to the netherlands or if there are any substitutes to it!
Only in the US I believe
@@WeirdExplorer Sad, you know any alternatives?
In review
The fruit 😁
The raw seed/bean 😀 (in limited quantities)
The tea ☺ (it's different)
The pod 😣 (maybe don't use the whole damn thing unless on a deserted island)
Fyi all Jared's thoughts and opinions, I am solely providing a tl;dr lol.
there is also juice made from the flesh surrounding the bean. Just add water to it let it sit until it mixes with the water put some lemon or lime juice honey and some ice. put in the fridge.
Are the seeds chewy when they're right out of the pod? Does it taste better to eat the seed with the fruit still on it?
I absolutely love your vid’s man!
In the first video you at one of the seeds too, it was white inside and didn’t taste good compared to the ones in this video. Is there any explanation for this?