Hey there! I've gone on a lot of amazing adventures since making this, if you'd like to see what I've been up to, here's a playlist: th-cam.com/play/PLvGFkMrO1ZxJldWKpSAhhnxuPYVeCt8oj.html
TH-cam algorithm sure is strange. Binge watched your videos 3-4 years ago and didn't get them in my recommendations at all after that but recently I've been getting these in my recommendations again.
There should be more background commentary in your newer videos about how things would look like skinning the most appropriate mythical animal. "this is what it would look like if you skinned a dragon."
10:12 So this is actually how Harry Potter really ended, the gang ending up making youtube videos about exotic fruits. Edit: Holy shit!!! I stumbled upon this video again after 2 years and I have forgotten that I have watched it before. I thought about how they looked like the Harry Potter trio and looked for a comment about that only to find out that I had already commented about it and it got 2k likes. This is so surreal.
Hi im from Puerto Rico, we peel it raw core and cut it into cubes them we either fry it and then squish in and refry its delicious and you can boil it and then use olive oil with garlic and salt super delicious
I stealthily aquired a number of breadfruit from a few gardens while on holiday in Barbados. I failed in my culinary experimentation the first time but the second i found that cutting off the rind and boiling the skinned product for 20 minutes left it soft like baked potato. I then cut it into slices and fried it in a shallow pan on each side. The end result yeilded these delicious crispy chips which were insanely tasty, especially with either paprika or italian herbs and salt. It was awesome, so worth 20 minutes and 10 for frying
@@lawrencepatrick2486 she didn't say that she brought them back home with her. She said she aquired them. So, you don't know if she cooked them at her holiday home on vacation or what.
@@lawrencepatrick2486 In many Asian / Mexican-Spanish stores in US main land they sell these. In US Virgin Islands these fruits actually grow( and other tropics in the world too).
This is late but you should find an Oil Down recipe. Breadfruit stewed down in coconut milk, onion, garlic, salt and some sort of meat (usually salted pork or Turkey but you can leave it out if you want). It’s really good!
It's yummy when it's almost ripe when roast. The roasted breadfruit has a somewhat sweet taste at that time. Its yummy with ackee and salt fish (Jamaican national dish). We roast it on the stove mostly these days. After it is roasted you can even fry it. It can even be boiled instead of roasted, but I prefer it roasted.
@@Gwynbleiddsanity You can, though you gotta have something to drink cause it's kinda dry on itself. If you fry them thin enough they're almost like potato chips.
Hi, just wanted to let you know that in Puerto Rico it's called "Panapen" and here's one of the ways that we cook it. We peal off the green shell with a knife then we cut it in half to remove the center which is part of the stem and then we dice it like a potato,boil it and season to liking. Or you can also google Puerto Rican recipes for panapen!
Bread fruit makes sense in the context of leaving it in a camp fire and just leaving it there. It's unattended time, and you can cook a bunch at a time.
No. If you do that, it will burn into charcoal. The natives of Pacific islands usually burn stones then toss it into a pit along with the fruit and then bury it for several hours. But in my region (Java), we just cut it into slabs of 1 cm thick, then fry it. Add some salt and it's done.
My dads Jamaican and we usually eat this as a side dish to curries and spicy stews, it's really easy to cook because you can just wrap it in foil and throw it in an oven for a few hours, it usually comes out quite sweet and fruity. Yknow when its ready when you can stick a knife threw it and its soft.
My family have this tree in our backyard. We usually makes it into chips or sliced it and steamed it with shredded coconut. A delicious savory afternoon snack!! Really surprised that our method of cooking it far different from the rest of the world. Never thought someone will roast the whole fruit
In Indonesia we peel the fruit when it's raw, cut it into thin wedges, and fry it then add some salt. Trust me, it taste AMAZING when it's fried like that! It's a somewhat popular streetfood here :D
Holden Mcgroine yes but it wouldn’t have the charred flavour that way. What we do here is add butter to it or mash it with cheese “cheesy breadfruit” It is like potato so you have to add to it the same way.
Super late but I think this would be an awesome thing to try cooking in a rotisserie oven with a single spit. You'd get a very even cook and since the bread fruit would be constantly moving it wouldn't be as charred. If I were able to find one of these where I live, I might even try it myself. Also, and possibly easier for a normal person without access to a rotisserie oven, you could even try a spit over a fire. Might be a cool thing to try at a bonfire party or something after Covid-19 wanes down a bit. Hope you like this idea but I'm sure it wouldn't be any less time consuming to try.
Love that you reviewed breadfruit. My grandmother had a tree and we ate it fried, boiled and fried ,roasted ,curry with shrimps and coconut milk l had this coming out my ears ,very buttery but hated that I had to eat it. Looking back, they are now expensive and scarce in UK . Caution , put a bit of oil on your hands to avoid the latex clinging and staining your hand.
i used to have bread fruit tree in front of my house, i gave lots of fruit every year we even gave them to our neighbors. you can just treat it like potato. peel it, cut into 4 section and throw the middle part, then you can cook it any way you want. You can make french fries with it, croquette, even cake. and it more efficient and tasty than char it on your stove.
LOL! I am from Puerto Rico, and we eat breadfruit all the time, when it is in season! We boil it. We peel the fruit, we cut it into wedges, cutting off the center part of the wedges which contains the seeds. We boil it in salted water. We cook it until the flesh is realtively soft. When you can poke it with a knife or fork and it goes it smoothly. We fish it out of the water, or drain it. Then we put it on a plate and salt it to taste, and pour olive oil over it. It is often used as a substitute for rice. It tastes slight potato-y and very slightly sweet-ish. It is firmer in consistency than a potato. I would NEVER roast it on the stove!
@Bardmusic66 Can be boiled, roasted, mashed as you would potatoes, or even sliced and fried as chips. 😋 Check out some other TH-cam videos on this versatile fruit.
A ripe breadfruit is very sweet when roasted. Like the name suggest, its more like a bread substitute - eat it with something. There is nothing unsafe about roasting on the stove. When peeling it try not to transfer the chars from the skin to the freshly peeled section.
Breadfruit is the potato of the carribean. Add a little bit of salt, pepper, vinegar and olive oil, and serve it on the side with salted cod, roasted chicken or tuna. You can also use it as a potato substitute for spanish tortillas. Here in Puerto Rico we also fry them, smash the fried piece breadfruit and fry them again to create "tostones de pana". It's kind of like french fries, but they're served with mayo ketchup instead. It's a bit nuttier in flavor and way more flavorful than a potato. You can eat them sweet and ripe, but we never really do. We cook them when they're still green and, otherwise, bitter if not cooked properly. Some people actually consume the bitter, green skin as a salad condiment. Very versatile fruit all in all 10/10.
What I heard is, Bread Fruit was throwen into a fire, and cooked that way because that's what peeple had. Cut some holes in it, and use a pressure cooker.
locally we call it "sukun". the best way to prepare it is to remove the skin and cut it in 1/4 inches slices. cover it with flour (+ any seasoning you like for eg. salt and black peper) and depp fry it. it only take 5 minutes to cook and voila. breadfruit is a common afternoon snack in malaysia.
weird that people would find bread fruit weird. 😂 bread fruit grows everywhere where i live. (Guadeloupe). you just cut i up and boil it. like you would do for potatoes.
I don't mean weird as a negative thing, they are very uncommon in the USA though. If you showed a breadfruit to 100 people on the street chances are only one or two people would know what it was.
In Trinidad we peel it, remove the core and cut the flesh into chunks then steam it or boil it in salted water, great with butter or olive oil, like potatoes. Can also be cooked in stews, curries or casseroles, or fried into chips or crisps. Can also be wrapped in foil and baked in the oven.
Back again with them fun facts. Breadfruit is in the Mulberry family, Moraceae. Closely related to the monkeyfruit, and to the Jackfruit. Seems like a lot of the trees and fruits contain latex, jackfruit especially. Many of them are also characterized by being multiple fruit. Breadfruit is either cultivated for seeds or for the fruit itself. It's one of the highest yielding food crops, and as you mentioned, can make over 200 fruits in a single season. Atrocarpus fruits look much like durian or even sugar apples but are unrelated. I would suggest throwing it in the oven btw. That way you can do other things.
In Jamaica we eat the breadfruit with meat or you can put butter on it when it's warm. Also you can fry it after you've sliced it. It becomes crispy and we eat that with a meat as well.
SUZIE POOZIE really and truly, it can be eaten with almost anything cause it acts as a substitute to rice. Don't forget your good old calaloo and saltfish, ackee and salt fish, cooked corned beef or mackerel.
Hey from hawaii! My grandma likes to cut it in cubes and cook it untill its nearly done- then cook it the rest of the way in sweetened coconmilk. Good stuff! Blanch it first to get that skin off a little easier. We also cook it, mash it up, add some spices and whatnot to make into hash (basically put in whatever you would for potato hash) but when its fried up, its GREAT
+JohnSmithAprilMay Thanks, glad you appreciate the reference haha. If you follow the series, I've also used the main theme for Salo and a Serbian film in some episodes
Ulus in general are not eaten raw, the taste is very lacking. However, Samoan ulu is sweet and delicious when eaten raw and soft. Surprisingly good. Ulu is hawaiian for breadfruit.
I'm in Hawaii, where Samoan ulus are pretty rare. I can't say what happens in Samoa. They get large, like a basket ball. I almost couldn't stop eating it, I think I ate half the fruit before I was too full to eat it anymore.
In St. Croix, the only way my mom and grandma prepared this was by peeling uncooked green fruits, cutting and coring it and cooking in stews with meat or beans. But your way looks interesting too, Im guessing it brings out the bready flavor rather than potato flavor.
Sidenote: I think they used green fruits because they're a bit firmer (for boiling without crumbling) and less sweet. I'd have to ask my mom why though.
Anyone from the Caribbean would say roasted breadfruit is best enjoyed with fish!! And the sweetest, creamiest, tastiest variety is the Hawaiian yellow.
Dude I grew up eating breadfruit and never seen or heard of anyone preparing it this way before. It would be boiled, just like potatoes as you stated or you can fry it like cassava or green plantains. It's delicious.
In Jamaica my family or just any one in general slices breadfruit like you would an apple. Crispy on the outside but a little softer on the inside. served with a sprinkle of salt.
Hey! To anyone who's watching it just now. Breadfruit is common in my place, and yes, we cook it. Never seen someone eat the fruit as is (ripe or not), or at least yet. But we eat it by frying it. So we peel it, and cut it into triangular shape (the seeds is the top of the triangle) and fried it. You can chop it a bit thick, wash it to get rid of the sap, give it a little seasoning (mostly just crushed garlic and salt) and fried it. We make savory rather than sweet. OR, you can make a chips out of it! It's reaaally tasty and fun to eat. Like before, peel and cut it all up, wash, the slice it thinly like ypu want to make potato chip or something, submerge it in water already mixed with seasoning (again, garlic and a bit of salt is enough), and fried it! Always cooked it that way
Indonesian here, according to my culture, we don't serve breadfruit(sukun) it like that... instead, we cut the fruit into a parabolic shape, deep-fry it and dip it in chili-garlic sauce I was surprised the name of this fruit(sukun) in English is breadfruit, because it explains the fruit itself so much!!! Fun Fact: 1. you can use sap of breadfruit tree as a bird trap
easier way to cook it to skin it discard the core and cut it into thin wedges.. dip in batter and deep fry like fritters or tempura.. we indians make a chickpea flour batter with water or buttermilk and some herbs spices. dip the wedges in it and fry.. delicious..
You also wipe your ass with your hand, let livestock roam the cities (fyi its 2018 we've already figuredout that's unsanitary) and have turned every river in your country into an open sewer. I'll stick with Florida oranges or George peaches. You can keep your 3rd world plants.
In Fiji we throw the breadfruit onto the coals and then peel and eat it. It’s good when you have some black bits on it because it ads Smokey and savoury flavours especially when it’s been cooked on a camp fire. That way it really smells and tastes like bread
Breadfruit is a staple food in the Maldives. We make chips, desserts, curries, porriages and lots of other recipes with it. One of my favorites is boiled (specially boiled, big halves are laid on a pan and breadfruit leaves are used to cover) with garudhiya (fish(mostly tuna) soup), grated coconut, chillies, lemon🇲🇻🇲🇻🇲🇻
I think this channel GREAT! I see SO many things now in the supermarket that I have NO clue what they are or how to eat them. Excellent idea for a channel. Thank you guys!
I learned about breadfruit when reading Mutiny on the Bounty. Breadfruit was the cargo the ship picked up prior to the events leading up to the mutiny itself.
It's always interesting to me how people conclude that a lot of these other foods aren't really worth the effort. I think if you have as much as choice as most people do in the West in terms of supermarkets, food vendors and food from all around the world, it is easy to assume these other things are kind of pointless. When you can get someone else to make you a pizza and have it in 15minutes it does seem that way. We can even get foods from almost polar regions right through to the tropics, often at any time of the year. But it you were one of these people who lived in the tropics and you had a breadfruit tree that produced all year, whereas mangoes only produce in part of the year, things other than taste factor in to your decision. It's obviously extremely useful to have a starch crop that grows on your lawn and has food on it all year round, and that only takes the time to cook it (compared to growing, harvesting, threshing, grinding, baking, etc for wheat). Some apple varieties, or even fruit like medlar, didn't taste as good but had other redeeming features such as being the only fruit available at that time of year, or storing well, or some other benefit. None of this invalidates what he's saying - you probably have better things to do than seek out a fruit which takes more than an hour to prepare and tastes bland. But I just wanted to point out that a lot of the value of a food comes from things other than its taste, and in affluent cultures we are so insulated from the reality of having to manage our food supply that so many people are spoilt for choice and are many degrees removed from anything resembling a local food supply, due to the insane trade connections around the world
Nice to know that. In Brazil we do have bread fruit, specially in the state I live in. I never thought of this fruit served as a french fries. I'll look out for a recipe.
If you want to know the real taste Cook in water with salt and coconut scrapings Or Make curry It is taste better than potato Note :use unriped fruit and before cooking you should remove its outer green skin and cut into pieces
In the Philippines, we remove the skin and cut it into slices. Then, we proceed to deep fry it in oil and add sugar. When you remove it from the pan, it's covered in this delicious browned sugar and it is crazy fragrant! Alternatively, you can just boil it in water. When it's soft enough to eat, you can dip it in brown sugar like how you dip fried chicken in gravy or ketchup.
In Puerto rico this is peeled with a knife while still raw then cut into thick slices and boiled in salt water with a bit of oil, then we typically eat it with a cod stew poured over it.. or in some cases we accompany it with fried chicken.. it's super tasty! My cousin once made flan with it as well.. and my grandmother sometimes allowed the seeds in it to grow really big and would take them out and boil them in salt water to eat.
lived in DR for a while and as some of the Puerto Rican peeps have mentioned, this thing can be cooked great the same way you do plantain to make tostones: you peel it, cube it up, fry it to partially cook it, smash the chunks into 1/4 inch thickness and fry again til crispy, and man do they get crispy!!!
We call it sukun as well since we speak a mixed version of Malay XD... Well at least my mom does anyway. The locals here call it Del(like the+L). There's also Jackfruit which is very sweet when they get ripe and massive. Very abundant.
I'm glad he introduced everyone. When Stu said that I thought crisping was Christan and that was Jarred's name :P I also liked when Stu said "I might eat it with my dinner, if Jarred made me". Cute ;)
Can confirm. Fire roasted breadfruit is pretty damn good. It's like a potato but different in many ways as well. Slightly tangy and sweet. Starchy and filling too with smokey notes from the fire. Yum.
In PR these are known as Mapen aka Pana. You can fry them like tostones ( fried green plantain). Peel, cut into slightly thick pieces and fry them till they just start turning golden, take them out of the fryer season and squish between a paper bag lightly greased with oil and throw back into the fryer till crispy and golden. Amazing!!
Aww, haven't ate those in ages. Those are usually eaten as snacks with hot drinks of your choosing in Malaysia. They taste really good just like sweet potatoes
goreng goreng! I have fond memories going down to the cafeteria and getting chunks of fried breadfruit and other snacks with a teh tarik when I was working there. It was like $1usd and so good.
Breadfruit was involved in the famous mutiny on the Bounty. Captain Bligh was transporting young breadfruit trees to the Caribbean when his crew rebelled and took over the ship.
Drunken Whaler yes it does. The ONLY reason they were there was to get breadfruit to the Atlantic to be a staple to feed the slave population of the Caribbean. It was a very important mission of the British empire. Unfortunately in those days the crews on these ships were practically slaves themselves. I believe Bligh returned later to complete the mission.
You should check with folks from the Caribbean and Hawaii for ways in using this very versatile fruit. Believe you overcooked this breadfruit. Best way in apartment is to wrap it in foil after it's tried and baked in the oven until it softens (does not take very long).
It's a very common fruit in Northeastern Brazil. I usually peel it and cut into cubes before cooking in boiling water, it tastes very similar to cassava. Add some butter and salt and you have a great appetizer. Deep fried is awesome too!
OKAY i know this is old but you see that stove thing yea cut that out if raw fire is not accessible oven roast it wrapped tight in foil chuck in and boom or you can boil it not a fan of boiling unless im making chips, you can make chips after roasting also, if fire is an option with a very sharp short to medium lenght blade preferrebly one that dosen't flex much cut the top with tip of the knife pointed in towards th core cut out a plug or cork of breadfruit carefully core out the heart of the fruit once seedy hairy parts are removed stuff it with whatever meat,cheese,saucy tuna is highly recommended butthe options are limited to nothing so keep in mind the cook times of what you put inside cook heavy meats half way before stuffing
I'm from the northeast of Brazil, here we cut it, remove the center and cook it in water and salt. Pressure cooker makes it faster, of course 😂 tastes amazing with some butter on top.
Here in malaysia we called it "sukun" ..we would cut it raw and dip in a batter and deep fried breadfruit like banana fritters (pisang goreng) or cempedak goreng...usually we would eat this type of dish during tea time with hot coffee or tea
In Hawaii we used to wait for it to become mushy to be fried in a pan and it would taste like pancake, chewy sweet pancake. Its also a staple food there like you said. Great video!
I found one of those once on vacation. I had a pressure cooker and a bbq. I pressure cooked it whole peeled and sliced it in steaks and BBQ it. It was good with sauce and without sauce
I know this video is super old, but hopefully you see my comment. I like the Cannibal Holocaust Theme so much. It's such a good song when it's taken out of context. Haha.
We indonesian call it "Sukun". Get this fruit when soft and still intact on tree. Then steamed it, done. Eat it with black tea, don't too much coz it containts alcohol
Here in Honduras we call it Mazapan. We fry it or boil till its on point. If you fry it you should eat it with dark fried beans and mantequilla. Fried mazapan its like eating fried green platano. Pretty tasty.
Hey there!
I've gone on a lot of amazing adventures since making this, if you'd like to see what I've been up to, here's a playlist: th-cam.com/play/PLvGFkMrO1ZxJldWKpSAhhnxuPYVeCt8oj.html
Iam new subscriber
I've been watching and addicted to your videos lately
Cool
Is cooked it on gas stove really a good choice?
TH-cam algorithm sure is strange. Binge watched your videos 3-4 years ago and didn't get them in my recommendations at all after that but recently I've been getting these in my recommendations again.
There should be more background commentary in your newer videos about how things would look like skinning the most appropriate mythical animal. "this is what it would look like if you skinned a dragon."
10:12 So this is actually how Harry Potter really ended, the gang ending up making youtube videos about exotic fruits.
Edit: Holy shit!!! I stumbled upon this video again after 2 years and I have forgotten that I have watched it before. I thought about how they looked like the Harry Potter trio and looked for a comment about that only to find out that I had already commented about it and it got 2k likes. This is so surreal.
Its not quite as magical as it was at Hogwartz...
HAAHHHHAHHAHHAH
"Fantastic Fruits and Where to Find Them"
Haha fuck this made me laugh hard
Yeah.
Hi im from Puerto Rico, we peel it raw core and cut it into cubes them we either fry it and then squish in and refry its delicious and you can boil it and then use olive oil with garlic and salt super delicious
Ana Justiniano Sounds yummy
We do that exact same process to platains, we call them "Tostones" Delicious!
Teonyi yup im from Puerto Rico aswel and she meant Tostones also mofongo
I’m from Humacao, I’ve only tried it once but it was delicious 🇵🇷
Ana Justiniano like colombian patacones, but instead of breadfruit we use Platano
This gives off strong "This is the last video of these friends seen alive" energy
I wish he would bring em back sometimes for videos, these 3 are great energy
I mean the intro song is from a movie called Cannibal Holocaust
@@devenalexander7851 I knew I recognised it from somewhere 😅
Yeah knowing Cannibal Holocaust says something about you as a person no judgment but like... especially if its the animal cruelty cut
It do
I stealthily aquired a number of breadfruit from a few gardens while on holiday in Barbados. I failed in my culinary experimentation the first time but the second i found that cutting off the rind and boiling the skinned product for 20 minutes left it soft like baked potato. I then cut it into slices and fried it in a shallow pan on each side. The end result yeilded these delicious crispy chips which were insanely tasty, especially with either paprika or italian herbs and salt. It was awesome, so worth 20 minutes and 10 for frying
You dont bring outside plants for fear of diseases and invasion to the ecosystem.
You dont bring outside plants for fear of diseases and invasion to the ecosystem.
@@lawrencepatrick2486 she didn't say that she brought them back home with her. She said she aquired them. So, you don't know if she cooked them at her holiday home on vacation or what.
@@lawrencepatrick2486 In many Asian / Mexican-Spanish stores in US main land they sell these. In US Virgin Islands these fruits actually grow( and other tropics in the world too).
This is late but you should find an Oil Down recipe. Breadfruit stewed down in coconut milk, onion, garlic, salt and some sort of meat (usually salted pork or Turkey but you can leave it out if you want). It’s really good!
"The tree produce latex, which can seal boats."
TO SHOW YOU THE POWER OF BREADFRUIT, I SAWED THIS BOAT IN HALF!!!
You sir have my respect
THATS A LOT OF DAMAGE!!!!!!!!!!!
Flex tape
Destruction 100
@@ainz7853 flex breadfruit?
What have we learn here today kids?
Not to use a bread knife when cutting bread fruit.
In not saying this coz I'm an Indian but that fruit screams 'add me in a curry'. It looks like it will soak the flavour of the dish like potatoes.
It is pretty amazing with curry
You are so correct!!
Bruh roasted breadfruit with Jamaican curried chicken is literally one of the best things I’ve ever eaten in my entire life.
Indian from the west indies and yes you hit the nail on the head
I'm saying this coz I'm a Malayali, but that fruit is good to make curry. Tastes somewhere between potato and sweet potato.
It's yummy when it's almost ripe when roast. The roasted breadfruit has a somewhat sweet taste at that time. Its yummy with ackee and salt fish (Jamaican national dish).
We roast it on the stove mostly these days. After it is roasted you can even fry it. It can even be boiled instead of roasted, but I prefer it roasted.
Rastafarisay, one love!
can you cut it up and fry it like french fries?
@@Gwynbleiddsanity You can, though you gotta have something to drink cause it's kinda dry on itself. If you fry them thin enough they're almost like potato chips.
@@hermesthegreek5247 thanks
I love breadfruit when its almost ripe
It should have a bit of sweetness
Hi, just wanted to let you know that in Puerto Rico it's called "Panapen" and here's one of the ways that we cook it. We peal off the green shell with a knife then we cut it in half to remove the center which is part of the stem and then we dice it like a potato,boil it and season to liking. Or you can also google Puerto Rican recipes for panapen!
Bread fruit makes sense in the context of leaving it in a camp fire and just leaving it there. It's unattended time, and you can cook a bunch at a time.
No. If you do that, it will burn into charcoal.
The natives of Pacific islands usually burn stones then toss it into a pit along with the fruit and then bury it for several hours.
But in my region (Java), we just cut it into slabs of 1 cm thick, then fry it. Add some salt and it's done.
It taste dull
My dads Jamaican and we usually eat this as a side dish to curries and spicy stews, it's really easy to cook because you can just wrap it in foil and throw it in an oven for a few hours, it usually comes out quite sweet and fruity. Yknow when its ready when you can stick a knife threw it and its soft.
@@miminotbovered2857 sweet and “fruity”
@@gorilladisco9108
Next to a fire and rotated a few times, like potato, would probably be ok.
looks like an extra crispy dragon egg
I concur
400 hundred like
True
*uses bread knife to cut bread fruit* logic 👍👌
😂😂😂
curved knife for a curved fruit might work better?
awaretenacious #DoesntGetTheJoke
Kainine Eli logic
200 iq
Skufzy I see you everywhere
My family have this tree in our backyard. We usually makes it into chips or sliced it and steamed it with shredded coconut. A delicious savory afternoon snack!!
Really surprised that our method of cooking it far different from the rest of the world. Never thought someone will roast the whole fruit
In Vietnam, we just deep fry these bad boys. It tastes like sweet potato and pineapple have a baby together
Isn't that pretty close to plantain?
Great description bro, thanks.
In Indonesia it's too
finally someone who have same mind as our
In Indonesia we peel the fruit when it's raw, cut it into thin wedges, and fry it then add some salt. Trust me, it taste AMAZING when it's fried like that! It's a somewhat popular streetfood here :D
Ya, and we call it ; SUKUN ... 👍😄
@@ajifraya6297 Iya. Im from Sabah, Malaysia also call this fruit as Sukun.
Sukun
Yess,, SUKUN 😅 Steam it, sprinkle with salt and grated coconut is also good.. but fried is the best 😂
So like plantains?
it taste a lot better when you peel the skin, and then cut it into smaller pieces and fry it. It taste better then french fries when you fry it.
I've had it fried, you're right, much better that way
Holden Mcgroine yes but it wouldn’t have the charred flavour that way. What we do here is add butter to it or mash it with cheese “cheesy breadfruit” It is like potato so you have to add to it the same way.
Doubt it's better than fries. Or you've never had good fries.
@@noreason2701 or you've never had breadfruit... am I right?
@@ClaudeSac its like ube. It is way better than a potato, no matter how you prepare it.
12:48 "if you have a hell of a lot of free time to kill" hmmm is breadfruit the ultimate quarantine food?
Yep. This and the Osage Orange: th-cam.com/video/40U8F8ZD9f0/w-d-xo.html
@@WeirdExplorer that on a 7 year old video lmao
HAHAHA 7 years later dude these videos are immortal and will always be relevant.
bad
@@Abznth bad
Super late but I think this would be an awesome thing to try cooking in a rotisserie oven with a single spit. You'd get a very even cook and since the bread fruit would be constantly moving it wouldn't be as charred. If I were able to find one of these where I live, I might even try it myself. Also, and possibly easier for a normal person without access to a rotisserie oven, you could even try a spit over a fire. Might be a cool thing to try at a bonfire party or something after Covid-19 wanes down a bit. Hope you like this idea but I'm sure it wouldn't be any less time consuming to try.
Love that you reviewed breadfruit. My grandmother had a tree and we ate it fried, boiled and fried ,roasted ,curry with shrimps and coconut milk l had this coming out my ears ,very buttery but hated that I had to eat it. Looking back, they are now expensive and scarce in UK . Caution , put a bit of oil on your hands to avoid the latex clinging and staining your hand.
I didn't know breafruit was real! Thank you Harvest Moon for showing me something new growing up.
i used to have bread fruit tree in front of my house, i gave lots of fruit every year we even gave them to our neighbors. you can just treat it like potato. peel it, cut into 4 section and throw the middle part, then you can cook it any way you want. You can make french fries with it, croquette, even cake. and it more efficient and tasty than char it on your stove.
U can also make a refreshing drink from it
LOL! I am from Puerto Rico, and we eat breadfruit all the time, when it is in season! We boil it. We peel the fruit, we cut it into wedges, cutting off the center part of the wedges which contains the seeds. We boil it in salted water. We cook it until the flesh is realtively soft. When you can poke it with a knife or fork and it goes it smoothly. We fish it out of the water, or drain it. Then we put it on a plate and salt it to taste, and pour olive oil over it. It is often used as a substitute for rice. It tastes slight potato-y and very slightly sweet-ish. It is firmer in consistency than a potato. I would NEVER roast it on the stove!
I havent had it boiled. just fried and roasted. Its interesting all the different ways you can prepare it
Alannah Herna
that’s how Jamaicans cook it ig
We folks from the Caribbean are smiling at him indulgently. 😀
Me as a south American too
Yep ☺️🤦😏
I'm Sri Lankan and this had me in stitches :), my wife was screaming throughout the video " what is he doing?!?"
How is it supposed to be eaten?
@Bardmusic66 Can be boiled, roasted, mashed as you would potatoes, or even sliced and fried as chips. 😋 Check out some other TH-cam videos on this versatile fruit.
That thumbnail scared the crap out of me. I was very confused and wondering why he was cooking a Madness Combat character. It literally looks like it.
i know right!
rip grunt 2002-2021
cooked on the stove
And then, the alien egg spread open and a face hugger spurted out of it, jumping at the nearest person, turning it into a vessel for a new spawn.
How did you guess?
@@WeirdExplorer He had one last week.
A ripe breadfruit is very sweet when roasted. Like the name suggest, its more like a bread substitute - eat it with something. There is nothing unsafe about roasting on the stove. When peeling it try not to transfer the chars from the skin to the freshly peeled section.
Bread fruit can be eaten raw when its fully ripe its soft, creamy,fragrant and sweet. It taste like sweet potato or freshly bake bread
Maria Stella Rios girl your gorgeous
@@casof97 eh
😋😋😋
Cool
Breadfruit is the potato of the carribean. Add a little bit of salt, pepper, vinegar and olive oil, and serve it on the side with salted cod, roasted chicken or tuna. You can also use it as a potato substitute for spanish tortillas. Here in Puerto Rico we also fry them, smash the fried piece breadfruit and fry them again to create "tostones de pana". It's kind of like french fries, but they're served with mayo ketchup instead. It's a bit nuttier in flavor and way more flavorful than a potato. You can eat them sweet and ripe, but we never really do. We cook them when they're still green and, otherwise, bitter if not cooked properly. Some people actually consume the bitter, green skin as a salad condiment. Very versatile fruit all in all 10/10.
And this is how I spend my Friday nights,watching a decade old video about bland fruit
What I heard is, Bread Fruit was throwen into a fire, and cooked that way because that's what peeple had. Cut some holes in it, and use a pressure cooker.
Kiki Lang “
Kiki Lang nah bake that shit
Matthew Niedbala
cut it batter it and deepfry it. popular snack in malaysia. sukun goreng
I didn't proof read my stuff. What do you think I meant?
locally we call it "sukun". the best way to prepare it is to remove the skin and cut it in 1/4 inches slices. cover it with flour (+ any seasoning you like for eg. salt and black peper) and depp fry it. it only take 5 minutes to cook and voila. breadfruit is a common afternoon snack in malaysia.
weird that people would find bread fruit weird. 😂
bread fruit grows everywhere where i live. (Guadeloupe). you just cut i up and boil it. like you would do for potatoes.
I don't mean weird as a negative thing, they are very uncommon in the USA though. If you showed a breadfruit to 100 people on the street chances are only one or two people would know what it was.
Nah I live in the USA and almost everyone knows where it is. Everyone buys it at my supermarket.
Damara Megido sure
@@MoniqueCalender In Texas, I've never heard of it
@@MoniqueCalender In Maryland I've never heard of it. This country is big, could very well be a regional thing within the US.
Looks very delicious
Ray Mak RAY HOW ARE YOU HERE AND HAVE ONLY 4 LIKES
@@aaravpanchal9186 BECAUSE NO ONE CARES OMEGALAWL
It is! We eat it in Jamaica. I love it when it's almost ripe
no you again impossible
Why is ray mak everywhere fuk this guy
In Trinidad we peel it, remove the core and cut the flesh into chunks then steam it or boil it in salted water, great with butter or olive oil, like potatoes. Can also be cooked in stews, curries or casseroles, or fried into chips or crisps. Can also be wrapped in foil and baked in the oven.
Back again with them fun facts. Breadfruit is in the Mulberry family, Moraceae. Closely related to the monkeyfruit, and to the Jackfruit. Seems like a lot of the trees and fruits contain latex, jackfruit especially. Many of them are also characterized by being multiple fruit. Breadfruit is either cultivated for seeds or for the fruit itself. It's one of the highest yielding food crops, and as you mentioned, can make over 200 fruits in a single season. Atrocarpus fruits look much like durian or even sugar apples but are unrelated.
I would suggest throwing it in the oven btw. That way you can do other things.
In Jamaica we eat the breadfruit with meat or you can put butter on it when it's warm. Also you can fry it after you've sliced it. It becomes crispy and we eat that with a meat as well.
SUZIE POOZIE really and truly, it can be eaten with almost anything cause it acts as a substitute to rice. Don't forget your good old calaloo and saltfish, ackee and salt fish, cooked corned beef or mackerel.
kivu88 that's what I meant by meat. He wouldn't know our kinds of "meats" lol.
Meat is terrible
In jamaica we always roast it first except when we are making soup then we boil it ,but after its roasted people like to slice it up and fry it ,
It is mostly fiber and is very low on the glycemic index. I am a diabetic and I can eat as much as I want without elevating my blood sugar
2013-2020: Here's some memes and gaming videos.
2021: So... You wanna learn how to cook a breadfruit?
TH-cam be like they wouldn't like that prior to 2021.
Hey from hawaii! My grandma likes to cut it in cubes and cook it untill its nearly done- then cook it the rest of the way in sweetened coconmilk. Good stuff! Blanch it first to get that skin off a little easier. We also cook it, mash it up, add some spices and whatnot to make into hash (basically put in whatever you would for potato hash) but when its fried up, its GREAT
I appreciate you using the theme from Cannibal Holocaust as the opening theme of a fruit review video.
+JohnSmithAprilMay Thanks, glad you appreciate the reference haha. If you follow the series, I've also used the main theme for Salo and a Serbian film in some episodes
a man likes his fruit and gut wrenching films
what more could you need?
ur a legend
Came here to say this! Love that theme.
Ulus in general are not eaten raw, the taste is very lacking. However, Samoan ulu is sweet and delicious when eaten raw and soft. Surprisingly good. Ulu is hawaiian for breadfruit.
interesting, I'll have to try that. Are they commonly eaten raw there?
I'm in Hawaii, where Samoan ulus are pretty rare. I can't say what happens in Samoa. They get large, like a basket ball. I almost couldn't stop eating it, I think I ate half the fruit before I was too full to eat it anymore.
Wilderness Farming I LOOOOVE sweet raw breadfruit.
In St. Croix, the only way my mom and grandma prepared this was by peeling uncooked green fruits, cutting and coring it and cooking in stews with meat or beans. But your way looks interesting too, Im guessing it brings out the bready flavor rather than potato flavor.
Sidenote: I think they used green fruits because they're a bit firmer (for boiling without crumbling) and less sweet. I'd have to ask my mom why though.
Anyone from the Caribbean would say roasted breadfruit is best enjoyed with fish!!
And the sweetest, creamiest, tastiest variety is the Hawaiian yellow.
Dude I grew up eating breadfruit and never seen or heard of anyone preparing it this way before. It would be boiled, just like potatoes as you stated or you can fry it like cassava or green plantains. It's delicious.
"Smell the little breadfruit butt." - Fruit Explorer
every caribbean auntie kissin' her teeth rn lol
Explain
Right
Bruh Ong im Jamaican and I showed this to my auntie and she kissed her teeth so dam hard
@@happyist3719 Basically cringe.
Means to show disapproval tsk tsk tsk
In Jamaica my family or just any one in general slices breadfruit like you would an apple. Crispy on the outside but a little softer on the inside. served with a sprinkle of salt.
It really is not that difficult to prepare. Go to how to roast or bake bread fruit on youtube.
Hey! To anyone who's watching it just now. Breadfruit is common in my place, and yes, we cook it. Never seen someone eat the fruit as is (ripe or not), or at least yet.
But we eat it by frying it. So we peel it, and cut it into triangular shape (the seeds is the top of the triangle) and fried it. You can chop it a bit thick, wash it to get rid of the sap, give it a little seasoning (mostly just crushed garlic and salt) and fried it. We make savory rather than sweet.
OR, you can make a chips out of it! It's reaaally tasty and fun to eat. Like before, peel and cut it all up, wash, the slice it thinly like ypu want to make potato chip or something, submerge it in water already mixed with seasoning (again, garlic and a bit of salt is enough), and fried it!
Always cooked it that way
Indonesian here,
according to my culture, we don't serve breadfruit(sukun) it like that...
instead, we cut the fruit into a parabolic shape, deep-fry it and dip it in chili-garlic sauce
I was surprised the name of this fruit(sukun) in English is breadfruit, because it explains the fruit itself so much!!!
Fun Fact:
1. you can use sap of breadfruit tree as a bird trap
easier way to cook it to skin it discard the core and cut it into thin wedges.. dip in batter and deep fry like fritters or tempura.. we indians make a chickpea flour batter with water or buttermilk and some herbs spices. dip the wedges in it and fry.. delicious..
That sounds plenty of tasty
Anything can be really good when deep fried correctly
You also wipe your ass with your hand, let livestock roam the cities (fyi its 2018 we've already figuredout that's unsanitary) and have turned every river in your country into an open sewer. I'll stick with Florida oranges or George peaches. You can keep your 3rd world plants.
John Wayne don't talk while in the grave.
@@johnwayne3085 jesus fucking Christ was that really necessary....
In Fiji we throw the breadfruit onto the coals and then peel and eat it. It’s good when you have some black bits on it because it ads Smokey and savoury flavours especially when it’s been cooked on a camp fire. That way it really smells and tastes like bread
you added some foul flavor to it because you cooked it directly into the methane/butane
This man has the coolest hobby! Thanks for taking us along!
Breadfruit is a staple food in the Maldives.
We make chips, desserts, curries, porriages and lots of other recipes with it.
One of my favorites is boiled (specially boiled, big halves are laid on a pan and breadfruit leaves are used to cover) with garudhiya (fish(mostly tuna) soup), grated coconut, chillies, lemon🇲🇻🇲🇻🇲🇻
Ghost shirt in 2013
I think this channel GREAT! I see SO many things now in the supermarket that I have NO clue what they are or how to eat them. Excellent idea for a channel. Thank you guys!
I learned about breadfruit when reading Mutiny on the Bounty. Breadfruit was the cargo the ship picked up prior to the events leading up to the mutiny itself.
It's always interesting to me how people conclude that a lot of these other foods aren't really worth the effort. I think if you have as much as choice as most people do in the West in terms of supermarkets, food vendors and food from all around the world, it is easy to assume these other things are kind of pointless. When you can get someone else to make you a pizza and have it in 15minutes it does seem that way. We can even get foods from almost polar regions right through to the tropics, often at any time of the year.
But it you were one of these people who lived in the tropics and you had a breadfruit tree that produced all year, whereas mangoes only produce in part of the year, things other than taste factor in to your decision. It's obviously extremely useful to have a starch crop that grows on your lawn and has food on it all year round, and that only takes the time to cook it (compared to growing, harvesting, threshing, grinding, baking, etc for wheat). Some apple varieties, or even fruit like medlar, didn't taste as good but had other redeeming features such as being the only fruit available at that time of year, or storing well, or some other benefit.
None of this invalidates what he's saying - you probably have better things to do than seek out a fruit which takes more than an hour to prepare and tastes bland. But I just wanted to point out that a lot of the value of a food comes from things other than its taste, and in affluent cultures we are so insulated from the reality of having to manage our food supply that so many people are spoilt for choice and are many degrees removed from anything resembling a local food supply, due to the insane trade connections around the world
Tip of the day: When cooking breadfruit on your stove top have friends nearby to put you out in case you catch on fire. Next...
So you see teacher, I didn't finish my homework because I watched a seven year old video about cooking breadfruit
We call this 'Ulu in Hawai'i - a restaurant here makes french fries out of it, but they're rather starchy...
Nice to know that. In Brazil we do have bread fruit, specially in the state I live in. I never thought of this fruit served as a french fries. I'll look out for a recipe.
We call it *kulo* in the Philippines.
If you enjoyed this, check out this episode where I Try a RIPE Breadfruit in The Seychelles: th-cam.com/video/8WNGpc6j9Is/w-d-xo.html
Weird Explorer I can’t believe you would go back to a 6 year old video just to link the ripe version after the video blew up, that’s commitment
I respect the hustle
We call it nirphanas in Marathi &kokani
we ussualy slice it up and deep fry it
If you want to know the real taste
Cook in water with salt and coconut scrapings
Or
Make curry
It is taste better than potato
Note :use unriped fruit and before cooking you should remove its outer green skin and cut into pieces
In the Philippines, we remove the skin and cut it into slices. Then, we proceed to deep fry it in oil and add sugar. When you remove it from the pan, it's covered in this delicious browned sugar and it is crazy fragrant!
Alternatively, you can just boil it in water. When it's soft enough to eat, you can dip it in brown sugar like how you dip fried chicken in gravy or ketchup.
In Puerto rico this is peeled with a knife while still raw then cut into thick slices and boiled in salt water with a bit of oil, then we typically eat it with a cod stew poured over it.. or in some cases we accompany it with fried chicken.. it's super tasty! My cousin once made flan with it as well.. and my grandmother sometimes allowed the seeds in it to grow really big and would take them out and boil them in salt water to eat.
"smell the little breadfruit butt" without context that would be hilarious
would make a good camp fire food, chuck it into the coals turn it around a few times .
+uching Yeah I think that would be a great way to use it. In the kitchen is way too much work for what its worth,.
I’m probably not saying anything new here, but you all look like the cast of Harry Potter. Also the fruit looks neat
lived in DR for a while and as some of the Puerto Rican peeps have mentioned, this thing can be cooked great the same way you do plantain to make tostones: you peel it, cube it up, fry it to partially cook it, smash the chunks into 1/4 inch thickness and fry again til crispy, and man do they get crispy!!!
Here in the Phils., it's called rimas or kamansi. We stew that in coconut milk. It's good for substituting meat.
OMG my fevourite one. we in /malaysia calling this SUKUN. Taste really good when u fried them.
I had that a lot when I was in Malaysia :) Goreng goreng with a teh tarik was one of my favorite snacks.
We call it sukun as well. Marinate it in roasted corriander seed, garlic and salt overnight before frying makes it even better
We call it sukun as well since we speak a mixed version of Malay XD... Well at least my mom does anyway. The locals here call it Del(like the+L). There's also Jackfruit which is very sweet when they get ripe and massive. Very abundant.
Thumbs up for your friend wearing a GHOST shirt!!!
“I’m really glad that’s not your flesh crisping.”
I'm glad he introduced everyone. When Stu said that I thought crisping was Christan and that was Jarred's name :P
I also liked when Stu said "I might eat it with my dinner, if Jarred made me". Cute ;)
Can confirm. Fire roasted breadfruit is pretty damn good. It's like a potato but different in many ways as well. Slightly tangy and sweet. Starchy and filling too with smokey notes from the fire. Yum.
In PR these are known as Mapen aka Pana. You can fry them like tostones ( fried green plantain). Peel, cut into slightly thick pieces and fry them till they just start turning golden, take them out of the fryer season and squish between a paper bag lightly greased with oil and throw back into the fryer till crispy and golden. Amazing!!
Aww, haven't ate those in ages. Those are usually eaten as snacks with hot drinks of your choosing in Malaysia. They taste really good just like sweet potatoes
goreng goreng!
I have fond memories going down to the cafeteria and getting chunks of fried breadfruit and other snacks with a teh tarik when I was working there. It was like $1usd and so good.
Breadfruit was involved in the famous mutiny on the Bounty. Captain Bligh was transporting young breadfruit trees to the Caribbean when his crew rebelled and took over the ship.
fascinating!
Does that really count as "involved", though? Unless they mutinied because of the breadfruit.
Drunken Whaler yes it does. The ONLY reason they were there was to get breadfruit to the Atlantic to be a staple to feed the slave population of the Caribbean.
It was a very important mission of the British empire. Unfortunately in those days the crews on these ships were practically slaves themselves.
I believe Bligh returned later to complete the mission.
In my place it’s called “SUKUN”
It’s really tasty to eat when its ripe then you deep fried it.
Where are you located?
Yes that is how you do it people +62 is legendary
or malaysia 🇲🇾 kerana di sini nama nya SUKUN
You should check with folks from the Caribbean and Hawaii for ways in using this very versatile fruit. Believe you overcooked this breadfruit. Best way in apartment is to wrap it in foil after it's tried and baked in the oven until it softens (does not take very long).
It's a very common fruit in Northeastern Brazil. I usually peel it and cut into cubes before cooking in boiling water, it tastes very similar to cassava. Add some butter and salt and you have a great appetizer. Deep fried is awesome too!
The Ghost shirt!
Love the cannibal holocaust theme at the beginning. definitely wasnt expecting it when i clicked the video lol
OKAY i know this is old but you see that stove thing yea cut that out if raw fire is not accessible oven roast it wrapped tight in foil chuck in and boom or you can boil it not a fan of boiling unless im making chips, you can make chips after roasting also, if fire is an option with a very sharp short to medium lenght blade preferrebly one that dosen't flex much cut the top with tip of the knife pointed in towards th core cut out a plug or cork of breadfruit carefully core out the heart of the fruit once seedy hairy parts are removed stuff it with whatever meat,cheese,saucy tuna is highly recommended butthe options are limited to nothing so keep in mind the cook times of what you put inside cook heavy meats half way before stuffing
I'm from the northeast of Brazil, here we cut it, remove the center and cook it in water and salt. Pressure cooker makes it faster, of course 😂 tastes amazing with some butter on top.
in South-East Asia region, we do slice it, deep fry and then pour or dip into liquid state coarse sugar or palm sugar. very delicious to eat.
I know this is an old video but tell your friend her Ghost shirt is cool.
You should of wrapped it with foil then bake in the oven
Yeah, less mess. But this was cool to watch because I like burning things :P
*Should've But otherwise I agree 100%! Cheers!
That's what my family does. Then we slice it up and have it with ackee and saltfish
The cannibal holocaust theme really makes you think it would be a video where the food would very strongly resist being eaten :P
I am so thankful that I discovered your channel
Here in malaysia we called it "sukun" ..we would cut it raw and dip in a batter and deep fried breadfruit like banana fritters (pisang goreng) or cempedak goreng...usually we would eat this type of dish during tea time with hot coffee or tea
Oh my god I love that ghost shirt
that Ghost shirt!!!!
Cat Mosh where
Ew ghost yuck
Surprised that nobody is making Madness Combat references
In Hawaii we used to wait for it to become mushy to be fried in a pan and it would taste like pancake, chewy sweet pancake. Its also a staple food there like you said. Great video!
I found one of those once on vacation. I had a pressure cooker and a bbq. I pressure cooked it whole peeled and sliced it in steaks and BBQ it. It was good with sauce and without sauce
Oh man! Peel, slice, fry! LOL
I know this video is super old, but hopefully you see my comment. I like the Cannibal Holocaust Theme so much. It's such a good song when it's taken out of context. Haha.
It looks like a dragen is going to hatch out of it
We indonesian call it "Sukun". Get this fruit when soft and still intact on tree. Then steamed it, done.
Eat it with black tea, don't too much coz it containts alcohol
Here in Honduras we call it Mazapan.
We fry it or boil till its on point.
If you fry it you should eat it with dark fried beans and mantequilla. Fried mazapan its like eating fried green platano. Pretty tasty.