- Source: Trichosanthes cucumerina
Trichosanthes cucumerina is a tropical or subtropical vine. Its variety T. cucumerina var. anguina raised for its strikingly long fruit. In Asia, it is eaten immature as a vegetable much like the summer squash and in Africa, the reddish pulp of mature snake gourd is used as an economical substitute for tomato. Common names for the cultivated variety include snake gourd, serpent gourd, chichinda padwal and Snake Tomato.
Trichosanthes cucumerina is found in the wild across much of South and Southeast Asia, including India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar(Burma) and southern China (Guangxi and Yunnan). It is also regarded as native in northern Australia. and naturalized in Florida, parts of Africa and on various islands in the Indian and Pacific Oceans.
Formerly, the cultivated form was considered a distinct species, T. anguina, but it is now generally regarded as conspecific with the wild populations, as they freely interbreed:
Trichosanthes cucumerina var. anguina (L.) Haines – cultivated variant
Trichosanthes cucumerina var. cucumerina – wild variant
Description
Trichosanthes cucumerina is a monoecious annual vine climbing by means of tendrils. Leaves are palmately lobed, up to 25 cm long. Flowers are unisexual, white, opening at night, with long branching hairs on the margins of the petals. These hairs are curled up in the daytime when the flower is closed, but unfurl at night to form a delicate lacy display (see photos in gallery below). Fruits can be up to 200 cm long, deep red at maturity, hanging below the vine.
The related Japanese snake gourd (Trichosanthes pilosa, sometimes called T. ovigera or T. cucumeroides), very similar in vegetative morphology, but the fruit of T. pilosa is round to egg-shaped, only about 7 cm long.
Cultivation
The fruit can be induced to grow straight by tying a weight to the end.
Uses
= Culinary
=The common name "snake gourd" refers to the narrow, twisted, elongated fruit. The soft-skinned immature fruit can reach up to 150 cm (59 in) in length. It is soft, bland, somewhat mucilaginous flesh is similar to that of the luffa and the calabash.
It is popular in the cuisines of South Asia and Southeast Asia and is now grown in some home gardens in Africa.
The primary culinary use of snake gourds is in curries and stews.
In the different regions of South Asia, it's quite common and is known by various names like:-
Hindi- chechenḍa/chichinḍa (चेचेण्डा/चिचिण्डा)
Punjabi- gala tori (ਗਲਾ ਤੋਰੀ)
Garhwali-chachenḍa (चचेंण्डा)
Gujarati- panḍoḷnu (પંડોળું)
Nepali- chichinno (चिचिन्नो)
Marathi- paḍwaḷ (पडवळ)
Konkani- poḍḍaḷe (पोड्डळे)
Bengali- chichinga (চিচিঙ্গা)
Odia- chhachindra (ଛଚିନ୍ଦ୍ରା)
Assamese- dhunduli (ধুন্দুলি)
Tamil- puḍalangai (புடலங்காய)
Kannada- paḍavalkai (ಪಡವಲಕಾಯಿ)
Telugu- poṭlakaya (పొట్లకాయ)
Malayalam- paḍavalanga (പടവലങ്ങ)
Tulu- paṭla kay (ಪಟ್ಲ ಕಾಯ್)
Meitei- lin manbi (ꯂꯤꯟ ꯃꯥꯅꯕꯤ)
Sinhala- pathola (පතෝල)
With some cultivars, the immature fruit has an unpleasant odor and a slightly bitter taste, both of which disappear in cooking. The fruit becomes too bitter to eat as it reaches maturity, but it does contain a reddish pulp that is used in Africa as a substitute for tomatoes.
The shoots, tendrils and leaves are also eaten as greens.
= Other
=The dried gourds were traditionally used as a soap substitute in some parts of Asia.
Gallery
See also
Trichosanthes kirilowii, Chinese snake gourd
Trichosanthes ovigera, Japanese snake gourd
Lagenaria siceraria, some of its immature edible cultivars can be found as "snake gourds", not the preferred name.
Trichosanthes dioica, Pointed gourd or Parwal, also edible when immature.
Notes
References
External links
Trichosanthes cucumerina Linn. improves glucose tolerance and tissue glycogen in non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus induced rats
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Pare belut
- Trichosanthes
- Kalayar
- Trichosanthes cucumerina
- Trichosanthes
- Trichosanthes pilosa
- Trichosanthes tricuspidata
- Maldivian cuisine
- List of vegetables
- List of vegetables used in Assamese cuisine
- Mauritian Creole
- List of Khmu plant common names
- Western bowerbird