May 21, 2007

JFI - Chakkapuzhukku (Mashed Raw Jackfruit)

I have been missing out on many JFI’s mainly due to laziness. But as soon as I saw this JFI ingredient by our cute Bee, I knew I couldn’t miss it. JFI-JackFruit. Whoa! Can anything be more Indian ingredient than that? Can any food blogger with turmeric tainted blood stay away from that?

I couldn’t! and guess what? My mom who doesn’t even know I blog, sends me packets and packets of fresh jackfruit through a friend just two weeks ago. This is what you call heavenly godly coincidence.

Then, what do I do? I being a true blue Malayalee think about all different kind of recipes for JFI to surprise everyone and end up with the good old Chakkaapuzhukku, a very Kerala dish. Aarggh...! I think I am cursed.

I don’t have to search the internet to write down these. Just need to jot down my memories. While growing up on plenty of jackfruits every season in Kerala, I grew upon two varieties. One is koozhchakka, a very fibrous variety, but not as tasty as the other one which is varikkachakka. Varikkachakka has a special variety known as thenvarikka which really tastes like honey. Varikkachakka fruit is very firm and you can eat as much as you want without getting a stomach ache.

1. jackfruit seed removed and halved
2. thin skin covering of the jackfruit seed
3. white strings on the whole fruit
4. whole fruit plucked from the thick skin
5. how the seed is attached to the whole fruit.


Usually you ripen the varikkachakka and eat is as a fruit. People prefer ripe varikkachakka as a fruit than the koozhchakka. Raw koozhachakka is prepared into curries etc. It is said that if you feast on too much koozhachakka, you get a stomach ache. I am not sure on this or whether the elders made us believe it.

Most jackfruit trees need special care while growing to make it varikka. Even if you buy varikka varieties to plant, it might end up as a koozha, since I remember my dad telling, the trees offshoot should be trimmed early or something like that.

Cutting jackfruit is a very tedious process. It is full of oozy sap that will stick to anything in contact. In most Kerala homes, there is an open verandah at the backside near to the kitchen, where all these kind of work is done. My mom or grandmom would sit down on the floor, with one leg folded upwards. They then hold the chakka with the left hand and with the right foot and would cut it into pieces with a hoom hoom noise as the knife goes down. We all sit round waiting it to be cut and distributed to savor it. I remember this process when I hear someone crib about cutting pineapple. I would think, wait until you cut a jackfruit.

While handling whole jackfruit, one needs special care to avoid the sap from sticking to your clothes etc. So you need to be very careful while cutting it. If you eat it directly, your hand also will be coated with a light film of sap. To wash it off, you first apply coconut oil and then wipe it clean with a cloth and then wash it off. There is a superstition that if you wash it off directly without oil, next year the tree won’t bear any fruits. I think this is a technique to remind everyone that without applying coconut oil to your hands first, you cannot actually get it cleaned thoroughly.

Even eating jackfruit is an art. My mom would cut the whole jackfruit into small portions with the skin on. We kids would then pluck off the fruit from the hard skin, take out the white strings attached to each fruit, bite into it and cut open into two. Then we take off the seed and a thin skin which covers the seeds and eat the fruit. Seeds, the white string covering, the thin cover of the seeds should not be eaten. Seeds can be eaten cooked.


Chakkapuzhukku Recipe

This dish is made with raw koozha jackfruit.

Half the jackfruit like 1 and cut each fruit into two inch pieces. – 3 cups

Cook covered with little salt and turmeric powder and ½ cup of water. When cooked, crush 1 cup of coconut, with ½ teaspoon cumin seeds, 5 green chilies and one sprig of curry leaves. Add the mixture crushed to this dish, mix well and cook covered for 5 more minutes and mash the cooked jackfruit lightly.

Heat 1 tsp of coconut oil, sauté two whole red chilies broken and add to the dish.This is served as a main dish usually with chicken or some meat curry.

My picture doesn’t show it completely mashed, since I didn’t know how the picture would turn out, but you would need to mash it little more, maybe for 5 more minutes to get the right consistency of a puzhukku. Puzhukku in Malayalam refers to boiled and mashed.


This post is also for my dear Revathi who had so many questions about jackfruit.

See 1. KappaPuzhukku
2. Jackfruit Erisseri

22 comments:

ബിന്ദു said...

enne kothippichallo...
:( parcel aayittu poratte kurachu.. ;)

bee said...

thak you, dear inji for your contribution to JFI. i was looking forward to your entry.


bee

Suganya said...

I didn't know they were two different types of Jackfruit. If I happen to buy the koozhchakka type, I assume it is under-ripe (Ignorant Me!!). Informative post..

Revathi said...

he he heeeeeeeeee thank you. You have forced me to try jackfruit.. Ravi is going to see me as an alien if I cook thatt... Thank you for the post :)

Meeta K. Wolff said...

Nice on inji! I have to admit my knowledge of Jackfruit is close to zilch. That's why your post was really interesting!

Sia said...

I remember this process when I hear someone crib about cutting pineapple. I would think, wait until you cut a jackfruit.
LOL... i agree with u inji...

FH said...

I love Jackfruit ,raw or ripe:))
Looks delicious Inji,great info too.
Mine is coming out tomorrow,four dishes out of that Jackfruit!!;D

Mishmash ! said...

hmm..chakka puzhukkum kanjeem...ethiri pickle-um......adipoli alle :)

Shn

ഡാലി said...

കൊതിപ്പ്പിച്ചതിന്ന് ഞാന്‍ വച്ചീട്ടുണ്ട്

Mandira said...

I didn't know there were two kinds of jackfruit and I've eaten a lot of them :) Lovely post Inji, great info.

Pramod.KM said...

picture looks nice.
Dont you know that i dont know english?

Kribha said...

Beautiful Post Inji. Very informative. I particularly loved the way you described eating a jackfruit. My mouth is watering already. Chakkapuzhukku looks great but it is a new dish to me. When I go to India I'll ask my mom to cook it for me.

Shah cooks said...

inji, no fair. can u give ur mom, my address too to send some chakka?

Revathi said...

Grrrrr Grrrrrrrrrrr Grrrrrr !!!

Sreelu said...

wow never heard of this dish , I can eat just the fruit as is .

Thanks for the recipe

Anonymous said...

inji, when i first got chakka (canned) i was planning to go for chakka puzhukku too then changed my mind. i am scared of koozhachakka because i choked on it once :)):)) i don't even know how to eat chakka:(:(.

you are so lucky to get the fresh green variety from kerala.

Prajusha said...

hi inji,
jackfruit puzhukku looks yummy.I love ripe jackfruit.

indosungod said...

Inji lovely lovely. I have not eaten Jackfruit in a while. Share the secret of how your mom managed to send those jackfruits. My mom is coming and I will ask her to bring it along.

Sig said...

chakka puzhukku, inji why oh why u are making me drool like this!

I have the same question as Indo... how did it stay fresh?

കല്യാണി said...

I was deeply disappointed by your chakkapuzhuku picture :-( What we prepare looks different and it is more yellowish in color. Like you said the original chakkapuzhuku (am not sure if I can claim that way) is mashed and the tender portion of the fruit (ചക്കച്ചുള) is cut into smaller pieces (we call it കീന്തുക or അരിയുക) than the ones shown in your picture. Will send a picture of our version once I go back.

Bong Mom said...

Lots of nice info..and your Ma sent you all that cut up raw jackfruit ? The way you get veegies from India, ahem :)

Anonymous said...

I am puzzled about why would you need oil? The sap inside is not present (or rather is not liquid and sticky) once the fruit is fully ripe. It seems that the majority of people dont know when to cut the jackfruit? :-)