Thorns of Desire

Durian

Wuan and I love durians. Between the two of us, we could eat countless durians in one sitting at the durian stall in Balik Pulau. I used to eat durians for breakfast, lunch, tea, dinner and supper. My dietary restrictions now have put a death knell to this gluttony. I have written about this King of Fruits a few years ago together with a doggerel dedicated to Wuan. I would like to share it here.

The durian is a rather unique fruit. It resembles more to an intimidating weapon that can inflict serious bodily injuries than a prized fruit. Its skin consists of short stubby thorns covering the entire fruit, with colours that vary from brown to green to yellowish. Its size can range from a small coconut to a very large watermelon.

The durian drops from the tree when it ripens. A ripe durian emits an odour, which to the uninitiated, reeks. It can be overpowering to the point of being nauseating. To the durian lover, its aroma is enough to make one drool.

There are several ways to open a durian. The durian seller cuts a small notch on the bottom with a very sharp knife and then pries it open with both hands. At home, prying with a very large kitchen knife usually opens the durian. Sometimes, a sharpened wooden stake is used instead.

Its flesh, which covers a seed, is encapsulated in several compartments within. The colours vary from light cream to yellow to orange to dark pink. A pink-fleshed durian would command a premium over a pale-fleshed one. Different durians taste different. Some are sweet and creamy while others are bitterly sweet.

The price of a reasonably good durian varies from RM5 up to RM50 per fruit, depending on its aroma, taste, flesh texture and scarcity. A low-yield harvest season would invariably increase the price while a bumper harvest will see the price plummeting to as low as 50sen per fruit.

Durians are given names, such as Red Prawn or D2, for easy identification. A real connoisseur would know a durian just by its thorns, smell or taste. However, soil, terrain and weather of different localities subtly changes the aroma and taste.

The durian is seasonal according to locality. Durians in one region may be ripe while in another, its flowers may just be blooming. In Penang island, several areas are famous for durian cultivation, namely Balik Pulau, Sungai Pinang, Paya Terubong, Relau and Teluk Kumbar.

Balik Pulau and Sungai Pinang durians are much sought after as these areas have some of the oldest durian trees in Penang. Durians from older trees are preferred, as its flesh texture is smoother and its aroma richer as compared to fruits from younger trees. Some of the trees here date back to the early 20th century.

Durians can be made into pastry, locally known as durian cake. Making the durian cake is a tedious process. The flesh is removed from the seed and then sifted for impurities. Sugar is added. It is then continuously stirred in a pot for 4 hours over a slow fire until it thickens and turns dark brown.

The durian can also be eaten with glutinous rice cooked in coconut milk or just plain white rice. The more adventurous will make a durian broth of green beans and coconut milk. The Malays like to eat it fermented. This fermented durian, called the tempoyak, smells even more pungently potent.

The durian skin is not wasted. Its ash is mixed with water to produce an alkaline solution. It is then used for making kee chang – a dumpling of glutinous rice mixed with the durian alkali. It is wrapped in bamboo leaves and steamed for several hours. It has a slightly tangy taste and is eaten with coconut sugar.

The durian is indeed the King of Fruits. Its menacing exterior belies the ambrosia within. Its sharp thorns are not a deterrent. Every year, the locals await the durian season in anticipation. A small fortune is spent in indulging on its pungently delicious flesh. If there ever were food fit for the Gods, durians would be it – to the durian lovers, at least.


DURIAN DOGGEREL

Your passion knows no bounds
You’d go anywhere it is found
If its pong gratifies your palate
In your tummy goes its fate

The menace of its thorns
Many a flesh it has torn
Has not deterred the addict
Though a stench follows the prick

Open it with an axe or a knife
It is just like a honeybee’s hive
To risk life, limb and injury
For a taste of this pungent savoury

Relish and lick your messy fingers
Clean your hand but the odour lingers
Go into a crowd and see them squelch
As you let out a most horrendous belch

Thus is my doggerel of the king of fruits
It rhymes, it sucks, and it is crude
Hey, but if you have tasted the durian
You’d know I was telling the truth, my friend.

* This entry was posted at Blogger are Morons for Blogathon 2005.

Author: Peter Tan

Peter Gabriel Tan. Penangite residing in the Klang Valley. Blissfully married to Wuan. A LaSallian through and through. Slave to three cats. Wheelchair user since 1984. End-stage renal disease since 2017. Principal Facilitator at Peter Tan Training specialising in Disability Equality Training. Former columnist of Breaking Barriers with The Borneo Post. This blog chronicles my life, thoughts and opinions. Connect with me on Twitter and Facebook.

4 thoughts on “Thorns of Desire”

  1. Durian…..
    It smell terrible…
    but it satisfy my tummy…..
    It poke your hands with it torns….
    But, it pamper your nose with its smell….
    It gives you hard time to open it….
    But, it gives your taste bud, once in a life time experince…..

    Same as you and WUan…. I’m a slave to durian….. but too much of it, there will few boils coming out from my flesh…..

    What a fate…..

  2. Shiau Lee,
    My durian indulgence usually have little side effects. Now I have to stop because my diet precludes an excess of everything, durians included.

  3. i notice penang people really have a thing for durians.

    everyone i know in/from penang eats durians like nobody’s business.

    i haven’t liked durians since i was 1 year old. perhaps it’s for the better. more durian for u guys to eat 😀

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