Jupiter in Sagittarius: Solve My Jackfruit Mystery and Help Me Expand
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I have Jupiter in aspect to my Moon so with Jupiter in Sagittarius it follows I would expand via FOOD and sure enough this has occurred. I have learned to cook Asian, something that previously seemed out of reach and I can manage chopsticks now… fluently, thanks to HQ (1/2 Japanese) and his wife (Korean) who insisted I try when I visited them in New York.
Today I was back shopping Har-Mart, the Asian grocery superstore. Remember the Asian gal who quizzed me over the spaghetti squash in my cart? She wanted to try something new. She wanted to learn to cook something exotic to her and hitchhiking on this, since meeting here, every time I hit this store I try to leave with something new (to me).
So today the jackfruit caught my eye. They sell cut into chunks and I’m very curious about it. There is an international audience her so can someone tell me how to cook and/or consume jackfruit?
Tell me and we’ll all know – Thanks.

4 Responses to “Jupiter in Sagittarius: Solve My Jackfruit Mystery and Help Me Expand”
Elsa,
Here’s some good info from:
http://www.deliciousorganics.com/recipes/exoticfruit.htm
Jackfruit is the largest fruit on the planet reaching up to 100 pounds! It is in the same family as the breadfruit and the fig.
How To Tell if it’s Ripe: It has a prickly exterior that is green or greenish yellow once ripe. When ripening it can have a strong smell, some describe it as rotten onions so a good whiff will tell you when it’s ripe, but you might have to get very close to smell it and those prickles are sharp so be careful! Once cut open, that bad smell goes away and a sweet tropical fragrance of pineapples, bananas and “juicy-fruit” emanates from the golden to orange colored fruit.
How to Use It: Practically all parts of the Jackfruit can be eaten! The pulp of the Jackfruit can be eaten raw as a fruit once ripe or cooked as a vegetable when unripe. Once cut, a sticky latex substance is present that can stain your clothes and stick to everything so wear latex gloves and an apron. You may also want to have oil for the knife so the latex doesn’t stick all over it too. First Cut it in 1/2 crosswise, then cut out the hard center core. You’ll note the bulbs of fruit amidst a sea of seeds which are easily separated. The seeds are easier to remove when cut crosswise. The meat is thick, firm, and sweet. It will continue to ripen even after being opened. Once separated from the skin and the seeds, wash and dry the fruit. Since they are so big, it’s nice to know that you can store the fruit in the refrigerator for up to a week or in the freezer for up to a year (though, the texture may change so it’s best to eat it fresh if eating it as a snack or in salads.)
Fresh ripe Jackfruit can be eaten as a snack, added it to fruit salads, smoothies, used it to flavor popsicles, desserts, and ice cream (try these recipes.) Sometimes it is soaked and boiled in milk or coconut milk and then the fruit is removed leaving a custard (from the gooey latex-like substance) of pretty orange-salmon color and a pleasant flavor.
The (50-500 starchy) seeds called breadnuts in each Jackfruit can also be eaten and are nutritious being high in calcium and a good source of protein. They can be boiled for 5 minutes and then roasted. Then eat them like chestnuts or cut them up and add them to stews, tomato sauce, or curries. In Thailand, the seeds are pounded into a flour.
When unripe, the Jackfruit can be cut in slices crosswise and boiled in salted water with the seeds still intact. Then the meat is separated from the skin and the seeds, and the meat and seeds can be eaten.
Traditionally, recipes (or try or these recipes or these recipes) using Jackfruit as a vegetable mix it with coconut milk or rice or fish, in soups or stews. It is commonly used in Indian and Asian cuisine. You can find Jackfruit canned in sugar syrup, which is the traditional way of preserving it, or frozen usually at an Asian or Indian Grocery Store. For more details and pictures on how to cut and use a Jackfruit see: http://www.fairchildgarden.org/research/jackfruit_how-to-use.html
Jackfruit can also be fried into chips, candied, pickled, dried, or fermented and distilled into a liquor. The rind is used to make jelly and can be pickled. I even saw recipes using the leaves!
Nutrition: Low in fat and a good source of Vitamin C and Manganese. The seeds are even more nutritious offering calcium and protein.
Jackfruit is an aquired taste. You can eat it raw or dried. Either way it is horrid to my palate.
There is a lot you can find online about it. When ripe it has a very strong smell.
I love these as chips (Thanks for reminding me they’re in my pantry!).
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A brazilian friend just gave me a crash course on jackfruit!!! IT was hard to understand it at first because i had never seen the fruit on the inside before, this picture helped:
http://fuleiragem.typepad.com/photos/feira_livre_de_campina_gr/dsc00805_1.JPG
So this is how it goes, there are two kinds of jackfruit, one is soft the other is harder. The following procedure is suited for any kind:
1-you cut them in slices like watermelon, like the guy is doing on the photo
2- you take the yellow balls (berries) out, that’s the eadible part
3- the berries have a seed inside wich you don’t eat
The fruit has a strong slime to it, after touching it you can wash your hands with vegetable oil and then water and soap!
You can keep the berries in the cold and eat them later!
Hope this is useful.