Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Rattan Fruits in Davao - Of Violin Dyes and Dragon's Blood


Rattan Fruit or Littuko is a rarity in Southeast Asia. I've traveled all over the region and hardly see the "fruits" in abundance. It's scaly, as though they come from snakes or some other reptile. You peel them like you do with lansones and out pops a triumvirate of clustered pods with the sourest taste this side of Datu Puti. While I love fruits, these are another matter. 


Online research reveals that, and I quote, "The fruit of some rattans exudes a red resin called dragon's blood. This resin was thought to have medicinal properties in antiquity and was also used as a dye for violins, among other things." Red resin, I didn't notice, except for the stains at the bottom of the fruit stalk, but the fruit inside is fleshy, almost transparent. "Dragon's blood" sounds interesting though, and I'd love to know the origin of such terms.

I'd probably acquire the taste after a hundred pieces. But allow me not to wait for a hundred.

This is the Eye in the Sky




4 comments:

Joseph Pulikotil said...

Hello, very interesting information. The photos are lovely. I have not seen this fruit

Best wishes

eye in the sky said...

Thanks. It isn't very common.

Twin said...

Have to try this when I come back to Davao.

eye in the sky said...

These are rarely found even in Davao.