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Taro

Taro (/ˈtɑːr, ˈtær/) (Colocasia esculenta) is a root vegetable. It is the most widely cultivated species of several plants in the family Araceae that are used as vegetables for their corms, leaves, and petioles. Taro corms are a food staple in African, Oceanic, and South Asian cultures (similar to yams). Taro is believed to be one of the earliest cultivated plants.

Taro
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Monocots
Order: Alismatales
Family: Araceae
Genus: Colocasia
Species:
C. esculenta
Binomial name
Colocasia esculenta
Synonyms[1][2][3]
  • Alocasia dussii Dammer
  • Alocasia illustris W.Bull
  • Aron colocasium (L.) St.-Lag.
  • Arum chinense L.
  • Arum colocasia L.
  • Arum colocasioides Desf.
  • Arum esculentum L.
  • Arum lividum Salisb.
  • Arum nymphaeifolium (Vent.) Roxb.
  • Arum peltatum Lam.
  • Caladium acre R.Br.
  • Caladium colocasia (L.) W.Wight nom. illeg.
  • Caladium colocasioides (Desf.) Brongn.
  • Caladium esculentum (L.) Vent.
  • Caladium glycyrrhizum. Fraser
  • Caladium nymphaeifolium Vent.
  • Caladium violaceum Desf.
  • Caladium violaceum Engl.
  • Calla gaby Blanco
  • Calla virosa Roxb.
  • Colocasia acris (R.Br.) Schott
  • Colocasia aegyptiaca Samp.
  • Colocasia colocasia (L.) Huth nom. inval.
  • Colocasia euchlora K.Koch & Linden
  • Colocasia fonstanesii Schott
  • Colocasia gracilis Engl.
  • Colocasia himalensis Royle
  • Colocasia neocaledonica Van Houtte
  • Colocasia nymphaeifolia (Vent.) Kunth
  • Colocasia peltata (Lam.) Samp.
  • Colocasia vera Hassk.
  • Colocasia violacea (Desf.) auct.
  • Colocasia virosa (Roxb.) Kunth
  • Colocasia vulgaris Raf.
  • Leucocasia esculenta (L.) Nakai
  • Steudnera virosa (Roxb.) Prain
  • Zantedeschia virosa (Roxb.) K.Koch

Names and etymology

The English term taro was borrowed from the Māori language when Captain Cook first observed Colocasia plantations there in 1769. The form taro or talo is widespread among Polynesian languages:[4] taro in Tahitian; talo in Samoan and Tongan; kalo in Hawaiian; taʻo in Marquesan. All these forms originate from Proto-Polynesian *talo,[4] which itself descended from Proto-Oceanic *talos (cf. dalo in Fijian) and Proto-Austronesian *tales (cf. tales in Javanese). However, irregularity in sound correspondences among the cognate forms in Austronesian suggests that the term may have been borrowed and spread from an Austroasiatic language perhaps in Borneo (cf. proto-Mon-Khmer *t2rawʔ, Khasi shriew, Khmu sroʔ).[5]

In the Odia language, it is called Saru (ସାରୁ).[6] In India, it is widely used in the Odisha region.[6]

In Cyprus, Colocasia has been in use since the Roman Empire. Today it is known as kolokasi (Kολοκάσι). It is usually cooked with celery and pork or chicken, in a tomato sauce in casserole. "Baby" kolokasi is called "poulles": after being fried dry, red wine and coriander seed are added, and then it is served with freshly squeezed lemon. Lately, some restaurants have begun serving thin slices of kolokasi deep fried, calling them "kolokasi chips".

Names for taro
Name Language/region
Colocasi (Kολοκάσι) Greek / Cypriot Greek
gabi Tagalog
ube Tagalog
aba Ilocos Region
natong/apay Bicol Region[7]
ede Igbo
kókò|lámbó Yoruba
kontomire Akan
jimbi Swahili
arbī (अरबी) Hindi
kesave (ಕೇಸವೆ) Kannada
saru (ସାରୁ) Odia
alu (आळू) Marathi
arvi (ਅਰਵੀ) Punjabi
pidalu (पिडालु) Nepali
chempu (சேம்பு) Tamil
chama (చామ) Telugu
yendem (ꯌꯦꯟꯗꯦꯝ) Meitei
venti (वेंटी) Konkani
chēmbŭ (ചേമ്പ്) Malayalam
kochu (কচু) Bengali[8]
(yù)/芋頭 (yùtou) Chinese
(ō͘/ū) or 芋仔 (ō͘-á) Taiwanese Hokkien[9]
vasa Paiwan[10]
tali Amis[11][12]
කිරි අළ Sinhala
Arikanchan Maithili[13]
토란 (Torahn) Korean

Other names include amadumbe or madumbi in the Zulu language,[14] "boina" in Wolaita language of Ethiopia, amateke in Kirundi and Kinyarwanda.[15] In Madagascar, it is known as saonjo. It is called eddo in Liberia. It is dasheen in Trinidad and Tobago, Saint Lucia and Jamaica.[16]: 23  The leaves are know are known as dasheen bush bhaji by Indo-Trinidadian and Tobagonians.[17] In Portuguese, it is known as taro, inhame, inhame-coco, taioba, taiova, taioba-de-são-tomé or matabala[18][19] and in Spanish it is called malanga.[20][21] In the Sinhala language of Sri Lanka it is called "Kiri Ala" (කිරිඅල), but malanga is a different species.[22]

The Ancient Greek word κολοκάσιον (kolokasion, lit. 'lotus root') is the origin of the Modern Greek word kolokasi (κολοκάσι), the word kolokas in both Greek and Turkish, and qolqas (قلقاس) in Arabic. It was borrowed in Latin as colocasia, hence the genus name Colocasia.[23][24]

Taro is among the most widely grown species in the group of tropical perennial plants that are referred to as "elephant ears" when grown as ornamental plants.[25]

In the Philippines, the whole plant is usually referred to as gabi, while the corm is called taro. Taro is very popular flavor for milktea in the country, and just as popular ingredient in several Flipino savory dishes such as sinigang.

Taxonomy and ecology

Nomenclature and related plants

Linnaeus originally described two species, Colocasia esculenta and Colocasia antiquorum, but many later botanists consider them both to be members of a single, very variable species, the correct name for which is Colocasia esculenta.[26][27] The specific epithet, esculenta, means "edible" in Latin.

Taro is related to Xanthosoma and Caladium, plants commonly grown ornamentally, and like them, it is sometimes loosely called elephant ear. Similar taro varieties include giant taro (Alocasia macrorrhizos), swamp taro (Cyrtosperma merkusii), and arrowleaf elephant's ear (Xanthosoma sagittifolium).

Description

Colocasia esculenta is a perennial, tropical plant primarily grown as a root vegetable for its edible, starchy corm. The plant has rhizomes of different shapes and sizes. Leaves are up to 40 cm × 24.8 cm (15+34 in × 9+34 in) and sprout from the rhizome. They are dark green above and light green beneath. They are triangular-ovate, sub-rounded and mucronate at the apex, with the tip of the basal lobes rounded or sub-rounded. The petiole is 0.8–1.2 m (2 ft 7 in – 3 ft 11 in) high. The path can be up to 25 cm (10 in) long. The spadix is about three fifths as long as the spathe, with flowering parts up to 8 mm (516 in) in diameter. The female portion is at the fertile ovaries intermixed with sterile white ones. Neuters grow above the females, and are rhomboid or irregular orium lobed, with six or eight cells. The appendage is shorter than the male portion.

Distribution and habitat

Colocasia esculenta is thought to be native to Southern India and Southeast Asia, but is widely naturalised.[28][29] Colocasia is thought to have originated in the Indomalayan realm, perhaps in East India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. It spread by cultivation eastward into Southeast Asia, East Asia and the Pacific Islands; westward to Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean Basin; and then southward and westward from there into East Africa and West Africa, where it spread to the Caribbean and Americas.

Taro was probably first native to the lowland wetlands of Malaysia, where it is called taloes.

In Australia, Colocasia esculenta var. aquatilis is thought to be native to the Kimberley region of Western Australia; the common variety esculenta is now naturalised and considered an invasive weed in Western Australia, the Northern Territory, Queensland and New South Wales.

In Europe, Colocasia esculenta is cultivated in Cyprus and it's called Colocasi, (Κολοκάσι in Greek) and it is certified as a PDO product. It is also found in the Greek island of Ikaria and cited as a vital source of food for the island during WW II.[30]

In Turkey, Colocasia esculenta is locally known as gölevez and mainly grown on the Mediterranean coast, such as the Alanya district of Antalya Province and the Anamur district of Mersin Province.

In Macaronesia this plant has become naturalized, probably as a result of the Portuguese discoveries and is frequently used in the macaronesian diet as an important carb source.

In the southeastern United States, this plant is recognized as an invasive species.[31][32][33][34][35] Many populations can be commonly found growing near drain ditches and bayous in Houston, Texas.

History

Taro is one of the most ancient cultivated crops.[36][37] Taro is found widely in tropical and subtropical regions of South Asia, East Asia, Southeast Asia, and Papua New Guinea, and northern Australia and in Maldives. Taro is highly polymorphic, making taxonomy and distinction between wild and cultivated types difficult. It is believed that they were domesticated independently multiple times, with authors giving possible locations as New Guinea, Mainland Southeast Asia, and northeastern India, based largely on the assumed native range of the wild plants.[38][39][40] However, more recent studies have pointed out that wild taro may have a much larger native distribution than previously believed, and wild breeding types may also likely be indigenous to other parts of Island Southeast Asia.[41][42]

Archaeological traces of taro exploitation have been recovered from numerous sites, though whether these were cultivated or wild types can not be ascertained. They include the Niah Caves of Borneo around 10,000 years ago,[43] Ille Cave of Palawan, dated to at least 11,000 year ago;[43][44] Kuk Swamp of New Guinea, dated to between 8250 BC and 7960 BC;[45][46] and Kilu Cave in the Solomon Islands dated to around 28,000 to 20,000 years ago.[47] In the case of Kuk Swamp, there is evidence of formalized agriculture emerging by about 10,000 years ago, with evidence of cultivated plots, though which plant was cultivated remains unknown.[48]

Taro were carried into the Pacific Islands by Austronesian peoples from around 1300 BC, where they became a staple crop of Polynesians, along with other types of "taros", like Alocasia macrorrhizos, Amorphophallus paeoniifolius, and Cyrtosperma merkusii. They are the most important and the most preferred among the four, because they were less likely to contain the irritating raphides present in the other plants.[49][50] Taro is also identified as one of the staples of Micronesia, from archaeological evidence dating back to the pre-colonial Latte Period (c. 900 - 1521 AD), indicating that it was also carried by Micronesians when they colonized the islands.[51][52] Taro pollen and starch residue have also been identified in Lapita sites, dated to between 1100 BC and 550 BC.[53] Taro was later spread to Madagascar as early as the 1st century AD.[54]

Cultivation

 
One of the largest taro-growing areas in the Hawaiian Islands is on Kauaʻi, in the Lower Hanalei Valley.
 
Geographic distribution of taro production
 
Taro output in 2009

At around 3.3 million metric tons per year, Nigeria is the largest producer of taro in the world. Taro can be grown in paddy fields where water is abundant or in upland situations where water is supplied by rainfall or supplemental irrigation. Taro is one of the few crops (along with rice and lotus) that can be grown under flooded conditions. This is due to air spaces in the petiole, which permit underwater gaseous exchange with the atmosphere. For a maximum dissolved oxygen supply, the water should be cool and flowing. Warm, stagnant water causes basal rotting. For maximum yields, the water level should be controlled so that the base of the plant is always under water.

Flooded cultivation has some advantages over dry-land cultivation: higher yields (about double), out-of-season production (which may result in higher prices), and weed control (which flooding facilitates). On the other hand, in flooded production systems taro requires a longer maturation period, investment in infrastructure, and higher operational costs, and monoculture is likely.

Like most root crops, taro and eddoes do well in deep, moist or even swampy soils where the annual rainfall exceeds 2,500 mm (100 in). Eddoes are more resistant to drought and cold. The crop attains maturity within six to twelve months after planting in dry-land cultivation and after twelve to fifteen months in wetland cultivation. The crop is harvested when the plant height decreases and the leaves turn yellow. These signals are usually less distinct in flooded taro cultivation.

Harvesting is usually done by hand tools, even in mechanized production systems. First, the soil around the corm is loosened, and then, the corm is pulled up by grabbing the base of the petioles. The global average yield is 6.2 tonnes per hectare (2.8 short tons per acre) but varies according to the region. In Asia, average yields reach 12.6 t/ha (5.6 short ton/acre).[55]

Top taro producers of 2017[56]
(million tonnes)
Country Production
  Nigeria 3.3
  China 1.9
  Cameroon 1.8
  Ghana 1.2
  Papua New Guinea 0.3
World total 10.2

Uses

Culinary

 
Peeled taro corms
Taro, cooked, without salt
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy594 kJ (142 kcal)
34.6 g
Sugars0.49
Dietary fiber5.1 g
0.11 g
0.52 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Thiamine (B1)
9%
0.107 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
2%
0.028 mg
Niacin (B3)
3%
0.51 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)
7%
0.336 mg
Vitamin B6
25%
0.331 mg
Folate (B9)
5%
19 μg
Vitamin C
6%
5 mg
Vitamin D
8%
1.2 μg
Vitamin E
20%
2.93 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
2%
18 mg
Iron
6%
0.72 mg
Magnesium
8%
30 mg
Manganese
21%
0.449 mg
Phosphorus
11%
76 mg
Potassium
10%
484 mg
Zinc
3%
0.27 mg

Link to USDA Database entry
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA FoodData Central

It is a food staple in African, Oceanic and South Asian cultures.[37]

Taro leaves, raw
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy177 kJ (42 kcal)
6.7 g
Sugars3 g
Dietary fiber3.7 g
0.74 g
5 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Vitamin A equiv.
30%
241 μg
27%
2895 μg
1932 μg
Thiamine (B1)
18%
0.209 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
38%
0.456 mg
Niacin (B3)
10%
1.513 mg
Vitamin B6
11%
0.146 mg
Folate (B9)
32%
126 μg
Vitamin C
63%
52 mg
Vitamin E
13%
2.02 mg
Vitamin K
103%
108.6 μg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
11%
107 mg
Iron
17%
2.25 mg
Magnesium
13%
45 mg
Manganese
34%
0.714 mg
Phosphorus
9%
60 mg
Potassium
14%
648 mg
Zinc
4%
0.41 mg

Link to USDA Database entry
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA FoodData Central

People usually consume its edible corm and leaves. The corms, which have a light purple color due to phenolic pigments,[57] are roasted, baked or boiled. The natural sugars give a sweet, nutty flavor. The starch is easily digestible, and since the grains are fine and small it is often used for baby food. Young taro leaves and stems can be eaten after boiling twice to remove the acrid flavor. The leaves are a good source of vitamins A and C and contain more protein than the corms.

In its raw form, the plant is toxic due to the presence of calcium oxalate,[58][59] and the presence of needle-shaped raphides in the plant cells. However, the toxin can be minimized and the tuber rendered palatable by cooking,[60] or by steeping in cold water overnight.

Corms of the small, round variety are peeled and boiled, then sold either frozen, bagged in their own liquids, or canned.

Oceania

Cook Islands

Taro is the pre-eminent crop of the Cook Islands and surpasses all other crops in terms of land area devoted to production. The prominence of the crop there has led it to be a staple of the population's diet. Taro is grown across the country, but the method of cultivation depends on the nature of the island it is grown on. Taro also plays an important role in the country's export trade.[61] The root is eaten boiled, as is standard across Polynesia. Taro leaves are also eaten, cooked with coconut milk, onion, and meat or fish.[62]

Fiji
 
Fijian lovo of cooked staples: taro and cassava (white)

Taro (dalo in Fijian) has been a staple of the Fijian diet for centuries, and its cultural importance is celebrated on Taro Day. Its growth as an export crop began in 1993 when taro leaf blight[63] decimated the taro industry in neighboring Samoa. Fiji filled the void and was soon supplying taro internationally. Almost 80% of Fiji's exported taro comes from the island of Taveuni where the taro beetle species Papuana uninodis is absent. The Fijian taro industry on the main islands of Viti Levu and Vanua Levu faces constant damage from the beetles. The Fiji Ministry of Agriculture and the Land Resources Division of the Secretariat of the Pacific Community (SPC) are researching pest control and instigating quarantine restrictions to prevent the spread of the pest. Taveuni now exports pest-damage-free crops.

Hawaii

Kalo is taro's Hawaiian name. The local crop plays an important role in Hawaiian culture and mythology. Taro is a traditional staple of the native cuisine of Hawaii. Some of the uses for taro include poi, table taro (steamed and served like a potato), taro chips, and lūʻau leaf (to make laulau). In Hawaii, kalo is farmed under either dryland or wetland conditions. Taro farming there is challenging because of the difficulties of accessing fresh water. Kalo is usually grown in "pond fields" known as loʻi. Typical dryland or "upland" varieties (varieties grown in watered but not flooded fields) are lehua maoli and bun long, the latter widely known as "Chinese taro". Bun long is used for making taro chips. Dasheen (also called "eddo") is another dryland variety cultivated for its corms or as an ornamental plant. A contemporary Hawaiian diet consists of many tuberous plants, particularly sweet potato and kalo.

The Hawaii Agricultural Statistics Service determined the 10-year median production of kalo to be about 6.1 million pounds (2,800 t).[64] However, 2003 taro production was only 5 million pounds (2,300 t), the lowest since record-keeping began in 1946. The previous low (1997) was 5.5 million pounds (2,500 t). Despite generally growing demand, production was even lower in 2005—only 4 million pounds, with kalo for processing into poi accounting for 97.5%.[65] Urbanization is one cause driving down harvests from the 1948 high of 14.1 million pounds (6,400 t), but more recently, the decline has resulted from pests and diseases. A non-native apple snail (Pomacea canaliculata) is a major culprit along with a plant rot disease traced to a species of fungus in the genus Phytophthora that now damages kalo crops throughout Hawaii. Although pesticides could control both problems to some extent, pesticide use in the loʻi is banned because of the opportunity for chemicals to migrate quickly into streams, and then eventually the sea.[64][65]

Social roles
 
Cleaning the kalo, Sandwich Islands, 1852, watercolour by James Gay Sawkins

Important aspects of Hawaiian culture revolve around kalo. For example, the newer name for a traditional Hawaiian feast, the lūʻau, comes from kalo. Young kalo tops baked with coconut milk and chicken meat or octopus arms are frequently served at luaus.[66]

By ancient Hawaiian custom, fighting is not allowed when a bowl of poi is "open". It is also disrespectful to fight in front of an elder and one should not raise their voice, speak angrily, or make rude comments or gestures.

Loʻi
 
Several small loʻi (pondfields) in which kalo (taro) is being grown in the Maunawili Valley on Oʻahu, Hawaiʻi. The ditch on the left in the picture is called an ʻauwai and supplies diverted stream water to the loʻi.

A loʻi is a patch of wetland dedicated to growing kalo. Hawaiians have traditionally used irrigation to produce kalo. Wetland fields produce ten to fifteen times more kalo per acre than dry fields.[67] Wetland-grown kalo need a constant flow of water.

About 300 varieties of kalo were originally brought to Hawaiʻi (about 100 remain). The kalo plant takes seven months to grow until harvest, so lo`i fields are used in rotation and the soil can be replenished while the loʻi in use has sufficient water. Stems are typically replanted in the lo`i for future harvests.

History

One mythological version of Hawaiian ancestry cites the taro plant as an ancestor to Hawaiians. Legend joins two siblings of high and divine rank: Papahānaumoku ("Papa from whom lands are born", or Earth mother) and Wākea (Sky father). Together they create the islands of Hawaii and a beautiful woman, Hoʻohokukalani (The Heavenly one who made the stars).[68]

The story of kalo begins when Wakea and Papa conceived their daughter, Hoʻohokukalani. Daughter and father then conceived a child together named Hāloanakalaukapalili (Long stalk trembling), but it was stillborn. After the father and daughter buried the child near their house, a kalo plant grew over the grave:[69]

The stems were slender and when the wind blew they swayed and bent as though paying homage, their heart-shaped leaves shivering gracefully as in hula. And in the center of each leaf water gathered, like a mother’s teardrop.[70]

The second child born of Wākea and Hoʻohokukalani was named Hāloa after his older brother. The kalo of the earth was the sustenance for the young brother and became the principal food for successive generations.[71] The Hawaiian word for family, ʻohana, is derived from ʻohā, the shoot that grows from the kalo corm. As young shoots grow from the corm of the kalo plant, so people, too, grow from their family.[72]

Papua New Guinea

The taro corm is a traditional staple crop for large parts of Papua New Guinea, with a domestic trade extending its consumption to areas where it is not traditionally grown. Taro from some regions has developed particularly good reputations with (for instance) Lae taro being highly prized.

Among the Urapmin people of Papua New Guinea, taro (known in Urap as ima) is the main source of sustenance along with the sweet potato (Urap: wan). In fact, the word for "food" in Urap is a compound of these two words.[73]

Polynesia

Considered the staple starch of traditional Polynesian cuisine, taro is both a common and prestigious food item that was first introduced to the Polynesian islands by prehistoric seafarers of Southeast Asian derivation. The tuber itself is prepared in various ways, including baking, steaming in earth ovens (umu or imu), boiling, and frying. The famous Hawaiian staple poi is made by mashing steamed taro roots with water. Taro also features in traditional desserts such as Samoan fa'ausi, which consists of grated, cooked taro mixed with coconut milk and brown sugar. The leaves of the taro plant also feature prominently in Polynesian cooking, especially as edible wrappings for dishes such as Hawaiian laulau, Fijian and Samoan palusami (wrapped around onions and coconut milk), and Tongan lupulu (wrapped corned beef). Ceremonial presentations on occasion of chiefly rites or communal events (weddings, funerals, etc.) traditionally included the ritual presentation of raw and cooked taro roots/plants.

The Hawaiian laulau traditionally contains pork, fish, and lu'au (cooked taro leaf). The wrapping is inedible ti leaves (Hawaiian: lau ki). Cooked taro leaf has the consistency of cooked spinach and is therefore unsuitable for use as a wrapping.

Samoa
 
Taro corms cooked with pig on the Samoan umu

In Samoa, the baby talo leaves and coconut milk are wrapped into parcels and cooked, along with other food, in an earth oven . The parcels are called palusami or lu'au. The resulting taste is smoky, sweet, savory and has a unique creamy texture. The root is also baked (Talo tao) in the umu or boiled with coconut cream (Faálifu Talo). It has a slightly bland and starchy flavor. It is sometimes called the Polynesian potato.

Tonga

is the Tongan word for the edible leaves of the taro plant (called talo in Tonga), as well as the traditional dish made using them. This meal is still prepared for special occasions and especially on Sunday. The dish consists of chopped meat, onions, and coconut milk wrapped in a number of taro leaves (lū talo). This is then wrapped traditionally in a banana leaf (nowadays, aluminum foil is often used) and put in the ʻumu to cook. It has a number of named varieties, dependent on the filling:

  • Lū pulu with beef, commonly using imported corned beef (kapapulu)
  • Lū sipi with lamb
  • Lū moa with chicken
  • Lū hoosi with horse meat

Oceanian Atolls

The islands situated along the border of the three main parts of Oceania (Polynesia, Micronesia and Melanesia) are more prone to being atolls rather than volcanic islands (most prominently Tuvalu, Tokelau, and Kiribati). As a result of this, Taro was not a part of the traditional diet due to the infertile soil and have only become a staple today through importation from other islands (Taro and Cassava cultivars are usually imported from Fiji or Samoa). The traditional staple however is the Swamp Taro known as Pulaka or Babai, a distant relative of the Taro but with a very long growing phase (3–5 years), larger and denser corms and coarser leaves. It is grown in a patch of land dug out to give rise to the freshwater lense beneath the soil. The lengthy growing time of this crop usually confines it as a food during festivities much like Pork although it can be preserved by drying out in the sun and storing it somewhere cool and dry to be enjoyed out of harvesting season.

East Asia

China

Taro (simplified Chinese: 芋头; traditional Chinese: 芋頭; pinyin: yùtou; Cantonese Yale: wuhtáu) is commonly used as a main course as steamed taro with or without sugar, as a substitute for other cereals, in Chinese cuisine in a variety of styles and provinces steamed, boiled or stir-fried as a main dish and as a flavor-enhancing ingredient. In Northern China, it is often boiled or steamed then peeled and eaten with or without sugar much like a potato. It is commonly braised with pork or beef. It is used in the Cantonese dim sum to make a small plated dish called taro dumpling as well as a pan-fried dish called taro cake. It can also be shredded into long strips which are woven together to form a seafood birdsnest. In Fujian cuisine, it is steamed or boiled and mixed with starch to form a dough for dumpling.

Taro cake is a delicacy traditionally eaten during Chinese New Year celebrations. As a dessert, it can be mashed into a purée or used as a flavoring in tong sui, ice cream, and other desserts such as Sweet Taro Pie. McDonald's sells taro-flavored pies in China.

Taro is mashed in the dessert known as taro purée.

 
Taro paste, also known as "Or Nee", is a famous traditional Chaoshan dessert from China

Taro paste, a traditional Cantonese cuisine, which originated from the Chaoshan region in the eastern part of China's Guangdong Province is a dessert made primarily from taro. The taro is steamed and then mashed into a thick paste, which forms the base of the dessert. Lard or fried onion oil is then added for fragrance. The dessert is traditionally sweetened with water chestnut syrup, and served with ginkgo nuts. Modern versions of the dessert include the addition of coconut cream and sweet corn. The dessert is commonly served at traditional Teochew wedding banquet dinners as the last course, marking the end of the banquet.

Japan
 
Excavated Japanese satoimo root (stems are cut before the plant is dug up): (1) Remaining stem from parent or seed satoimo, (2) Parent or seed satoimo, (3) Remaining stem from child satoimo, (4) Child satoimo, (5) Grandchild satoimo
 
Colocasia esculenta from the Japanese agricultural encyclopedia Seikei Zusetsu

A similar plant in Japan is called satoimo (里芋、サトイモ, literally "village potato"). The "child" and "grandchild" corms (cormels, cormlets) which bud from the parent satoimo, are called koimo (子芋) and magoimo (孫芋), respectively, or more generally imonoko (芋の子). Satoimo has been propagated in Southeast Asia since the late Jōmon period. It was a regional staple before rice became predominant. The tuber, satoimo, is often prepared through simmering in fish stock (dashi) and soy sauce. The stalk, zuiki [ja], can also be prepared a number of ways, depending on the variety.[74]

Korea
 
Toran-guk (taro soup)

In Korea, taro is called toran (Korean: 토란: "earth egg"), and the corm is stewed and the leaf stem is stir-fried. Taro roots can be used for medicinal purposes, particularly for treating insect bites. It is made into the Korean traditional soup toranguk (토란국). Taro stems are often used as an ingredient in yukgaejang (육개장).

Taiwan
 
Small ball of mashed taro paste served on a banana leaf in a restaurant of the Daan district (Taipei)

In Taiwan, taro— yùtóu (芋頭) in Mandarin, and ō͘-á (芋仔) in Taiwanese—is well-adapted to Taiwanese climate and can grow almost anywhere in the country with minimal maintenance. Before the Taiwan Miracle made rice affordable to everyone, taro was one of the main staples in Taiwan. Nowadays taro is used more often in desserts. Supermarket varieties range from about the size and shape of a brussels sprout to longer, larger varieties the size of a football. Taro chips are often used as a potato-chip-like snack. Compared to potato chips, taro chips are harder and have a nuttier flavor. Another popular traditional Taiwanese snack is taro ball, served on ice or deep-fried. It is common to see taro as a flavor in desserts and drinks, such as bubble tea.

Southeast Asia

Indonesia

In Indonesia, taro is widely used for snacks, cakes, crackers, and even macarons, thus it can be easily found everywhere. Some varieties are specially cultivated in accordance with social or geographical traditions. Taro is usually known as "keladi", although other varieties are also known as "talas", among others. Chinese descendants in Indonesia often eat taro with stewed rice and dried shrimp. The taro is diced and cooked along with the rice, the shrimp, and sesame oil.

Philippines
 
Laing

In the Philippines taro is usually called gabi, abi, or avi and is widely available throughout the archipelago. Its adaptability to marshland and swamps make it one of the most common vegetables in the Philippines. The leaves, stems, and corms are all consumed and form part of the local cuisine. A popular recipe for taro is laing from the Bicol Region; the dish's main ingredients are taro leaves (at times including stems) cooked in coconut milk, and salted with fermented shrimp or fish bagoong.[75] It is sometimes heavily spiced with red hot chilies called siling labuyo. Another dish in which taro is commonly used is the Philippine national stew, sinigang, although radish can be used if taro is not available. This stew is made with pork and beef, shrimp, or fish, a souring agent (tamarind fruit, kamias, etc.) with the addition of peeled and diced corms as thickener. The corm is also prepared as a basic ingredient for ginataan, a coconut milk and taro dessert.

Thailand

In Thai cuisine, taro Thai: เผือก (pheuak) is used in a variety of ways depending on the region. Boiled taro is readily available in the market packaged in small cellophane bags, already peeled and diced, and eaten as a snack. Pieces of boiled taro with coconut milk are a traditional Thai dessert.[76] Raw taro is also often sliced and deep fried and sold in bags as chips (เผือกทอด). As in other Asian countries, taro is a popular flavor for ice cream in Thailand.[77]

Vietnam
 
Chè khoai môn

In Vietnam, there is a large variety of taro plants. One is called khoai môn, which is used as a filling in spring rolls, cakes, puddings and sweet soup desserts, smoothies and other desserts. Taro is used in the Tết dessert chè khoai môn, which is sticky rice pudding with taro roots. The stems are also used in soups such as canh chua. One is called khoai sọ, which is smaller in size than khoai môn. Another common taro plant grows roots in shallow waters and grows stems and leaves above the surface of the water. This taro plant has saponin-like substances that cause a hot, itchy feeling in the mouth and throat. Northern farmers used to plant them to cook the stems and leaves to feed their hogs. They re-grew quickly from their roots. After cooking, the saponin in the soup of taro stems and leaves is reduced to a level the hogs can eat. Today this practice is no longer popular in Vietnam agriculture. These taro plants are commonly called khoai ngứa, which literally means "itchy potato".

South Asia

Taro roots are commonly known as Arbi or Arvi in Urdu and Hindi language. It is a common dish in Northern India and Pakistan. Arbi Gosht (meat) Masala Recipe is a delicious tangy mutton curry recipe with taro vegetable. Mutton and Arbi is cooked in whole spices and tomatoes which lends a wonderful taste to the dish.[78]

 
Arbi Gosht
Bangladesh
 
Kochu bata

In Bangladesh taro is a very popular vegetable known as kochu (কচু) or mukhi (মুখি). Within the Sylheti language, it is called mukhi. It is usually cooked with small prawns or the ilish fish into a curry, but some dishes are cooked with dried fish. Its green leaves, kochu pata (কচু পাতা), and stem, kochu (কচু), are also eaten as a favorite dish and usually ground to a paste or finely chopped to make shak — but it must be boiled well beforehand. Taro stolons or stems, kochur loti (কচুর লতি), are also favored by Bangladeshis and cooked with shrimp, dried fish or the head of the ilish fish.[79] Taro is available, either fresh or frozen, in the UK and US in most Asian stores and supermarkets specialising in Sylheti, Bangladeshi or South Asian food. Also, another variety called maan kochu is consumed and is a rich source of vitamins and nutrients. Maan Kochu is made into a paste and fried to prepare a delicious food known as Kochu Bata.

 
Taro stolons at a market in Dhaka
India
 
Saru bhaja

In India, taro or eddoe is a common dish served in many ways.

In Gujarat, it is called Patar Vel or Saryia Na Paan green leaves are used by making a roll, with besan (gram flour), salt, turmeric, red chili powder all put into paste form inside leaves. Then steamed and in small portions, as well as fried in the deep fryer.

In Mizoram, in north-eastern India, it is called bäl; the leaves, stalks and corms are eaten as dawl bai. The leaves and stalks are often traditionally preserved to be eaten in dry season as dawl rëp bai.[80][81]

In Assam, a north-eastern state, taro is known as kosu (কচু). Various parts of the plant are eaten by making different dishes. The leaf buds called kosu loti (কচু লতি) are cooked with sour dried fruits and called thekera (থেকেৰা) or sometimes eaten alongside tamarind, elephant apple, a small amount of pulses, or fish. Similar dishes are prepared from the long root-like structures called kosu thuri. A sour fried dish is made from its flower (kosu kala). Porridges are made from the corms themselves, which may also be boiled, seasoned with salt and eaten as snacks.

In Manipur, another north-eastern state, taro is known as pan. The Kukis calls it bal. Boiled bal is a snack at lunch along with chutney or hot chili-flakes besides being cooked as a main dish along with smoked or dried meat, beans, and mustard leaves. Sun-dried taro leaves are later used in broth and stews. It is widely available and is eaten in many forms, either baked, boiled, or cooked into a curry with hilsa or with fermented soybeans called hawai-zaar. The leaves are also used in a special traditional dish called utti, cooked with peas.

It is called arbi in Urdu/Hindi and arvi in Punjabi in north India. It is called kəchu (कचु) in Sanskrit.[82]

In Himachal Pradesh, in northern India, taro corms are known as ghandyali, and the plant is known as kachalu in the Kangra and Mandi districts. The dish called patrodu is made using taro leaves rolled with corn or gram flour and boiled in water. Another dish, pujji is made with mashed leaves and the trunk of the plant and ghandyali or taro corms are prepared as a separate dish. In Shimla, a pancake-style dish, called patra or patid, is made using gram flour.

In Uttarakhand and neighboring Nepal, taro is considered a healthy food and is cooked in a variety of ways. The delicate gaderi (taro variety) of Kumaon, especially from Lobanj, Bageshwar district, is much sought after. Most commonly it is boiled in tamarind water until tender, then diced into cubes which are stir-fried in mustard oil with fenugreek leaves. Another technique for preparation is boiling it in salt water till it is reduced to a porridge. The young leaves called gaaba, are steamed, sun-dried, and stored for later use. Taro leaves and stems are pickled. Crushed leaves and stems are mixed with de-husked urad daal (black lentils) and then dried as small balls called badi. These stems may also be sun-dried and stored for later use. On auspicious days, women worship saptarshi ("seven sages") and only eat rice with taro leaves.

In Maharashtra, in western India, the leaves, called alu che paana, are de-veined and rolled with a paste of gram flour. Then seasoned with tamarind paste, red chili powder, turmeric, coriander, asafoetida and salt, and finally steamed. These can be eaten whole, cut into pieces, or shallow fried and eaten as a snack known as alu chi wadi. Alu chya panan chi patal bhaji a lentil and colocasia leaves curry, is also popular. In Goan as well as Konkani cuisine taro leaves are very popular. A tall-growing variety of taro is extensively used on the western coast of India to make patrode, patrade, or patrada (lit. "leaf-pancake") a dish with gram flour, tamarind and other spices.

In Gujarat, it is called patar vel or saryia na paan. Gram flour, salt, turmeric, red chili powder made into paste and stuffed inside a roll of green taro leaves. Then steamed and in small portions and then fried.[83]

Sindhis call it kachaloo; they fry it, compress it, and re-fry it to make a dish called tuk which complements Sindhi curry.

In Kerala, a state in southern India, taro corms are known as chembu kizhangu (ചേമ്പ് കിഴങ്ങ്) and are a staple food, a side dish, and an ingredient in various side dishes like sambar. As a staple food, it is steamed and eaten with a spicy chutney of green chilies, tamarind, and shallots. The leaves and stems of certain varieties of taro are also used as a vegetable in Kerala. In Dakshin Kannada in Karnataka, it is used as a breakfast dish, either made like fritters or steamed.

In Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh, taro corms are known as sivapan-kizhangu (seppankilangu or cheppankilangu), chamagadda, or in coastal Andhra districts as chaama dumpa. They can be prepared in a variety of ways, such as by deep-frying in oil to be eaten on the side with rice, or cooking in a tangy tamarind sauce with spices, onion, and tomato.

In the east Indian state of West Bengal, taro corms are thinly sliced and fried to make chips called kochu bhaja(কচু ভাজা). The stem is used to cook kochur saag (কচুর শাগ) with fried hilsha (ilish) head or boiled chhola (chickpea), often eaten as a starter with hot rice. The corms are also made into a paste with spices and eaten with rice. The most popular dish is a spicy curry made with prawn and taro corms. Gathi kochu (গাঠি কচু) (taro variety) are very popular and used to make a thick curry called gathi kochur dal (গাঠি কচুর ডাল). Here kochur loti (কচুর লতি) (taro stolon) dry curry[84] is a popular dish which is usually prepared with poppy seeds and mustard paste. Leaves and corms of shola kochu (শলা কচু) and maan kochu (মান কচু) are also used to make some popular traditional dishes.

In Mithila, Bihar, taro corms are known as ədua (अडुआ) and its leaves are called ədikunch ke paat (अड़िकंच के पात). A curry of taro leaves is made with mustard paste and sour sun-dried mango pulp (आमिल; aamil).

In Odisha, taro corms are known as saru. Dishes made of taro include saru besara (taro in mustard and garlic paste). It is also an indispensable ingredient in preparing dalma, an Odia cuisine staple (vegetables cooked with dal). Sliced taro corms, deep fried in oil and mixed with red chili powder and salt, are known as 'saru chips'.

Maldives

Ala was widely grown in the southern atolls of Addu Atoll, Fuvahmulah, Huvadhu Atoll, and Laamu Atoll and is considered a staple even after rice was introduced. Ala and olhu ala are still widely eaten all over the Maldives, cooked or steamed with salt to taste, and eaten with grated coconut along with chili paste and fish soup. It is also prepared as a curry. The corms are sliced and fried to make chips and are also used to prepare varieties of sweets.[85]

Nepal
 
Arikanchan is prepared from taro leaves, black lentils paste and spices in mostly the Eastern Terai of Nepal, is traditional and indigenous food.

Taro is grown in the Terai and the hilly regions of Nepal. The root (corm) of taro is known as pindalu (पिँडालु) and petioles with leaves are known as karkalo (कर्कलो), Gava (गाभा) and also Kaichu (केेेैचु) in Maithili. Almost all parts are eaten in different dishes. Boiled corm of Taro is commonly served with salt, spices, and chilies. Taro is a popular dish in the hilly region. Chopped leaves and petioles are mixed with Urad bean flour to make dried balls called maseura (मस्यौरा). Large taro leaves are used as an alternative to an umbrella when unexpected rain occurs. Popular attachment to taro since ancient times is reflected in popular culture, such as in songs and textbooks. Jivan hamro karkala ko pani jastai ho (जीवन हाम्रो कर्कलाको पानी जस्तै हो) means, "Our life is as vulnerable as water stuck in the leaf of taro".

Taro is cultivated and eaten by the Tharu people in the Inner Terai as well. Roots are mixed with dried fish and turmeric, then dried in cakes called sidhara which are curried with radish, chili, garlic and other spices to accompany rice. The Tharu prepare the leaves in a fried vegetable side-dish that also shows up in Maithili cuisine.[86]

Pakistan
 
Arvi gosht

In Pakistan, taro or eddoe or arvi is a very common dish served with or without gravy; a popular dish is arvi gosht, which includes beef, lamb or mutton. The leaves are rolled along with gram flour batter and then fried or steamed to make a dish called Pakora, which is finished by tempering with red chilies and carrom (ajwain) seeds. Taro or arvi is also cooked with chopped spinach. The dish called Arvi Palak is the second most renowned dish made of Taro.

Sri Lanka

Many varieties are recorded in Sri Lanka, several being edible, others being toxic to humans and therefore not cultivated. Edible varieties (kiri ala, kolakana ala, gahala, and sevel ala) are cultivated for their corms and leaves. Sri Lankans eat corms after boiling them or making them into a curry with coconut milk. The leaves of only two variety, kolakana ala and kalu alakola are eaten.

Middle East and Europe

Taro was consumed by the early Romans in much the same way the potato is today. They called this root vegetable colocasia. The Roman cookbook Apicius mentions several methods for preparing taro, including boiling, preparing with sauces, and cooking with meat or fowl. After the fall of the Roman Empire, the use of taro dwindled in Europe. This was largely due to the decline of trade and commerce with Egypt, previously controlled by Rome. When the Spanish and Portuguese sailed to the new world, they brought taro along with them. Recently[when?] there has been renewed interest in exotic foods and consumption is increasing.

Cyprus

In Cyprus, taro has been in use since the time of the Roman Empire. Today it is known as kolokas in Turkish or kolokasi (κολοκάσι) in Greek, which comes from the Ancient Greek name κολοκάσιον (kolokasion) for lotus root. It is usually sauteed with celery and onion with pork, chicken or lamb, in a tomato sauce – a vegetarian version is also available. The cormlets are called poulles (sing. poulla), and they are prepared by first being sauteed, followed by decaramelising the vessel with dry red wine and coriander seeds, and finally served with freshly squeezed lemon.

Egypt

In Egypt, taro is known as qolqas (Egyptian Arabic: قلقاس, IPA: [ʔolˈʔæːs]). The corms are larger than what would be found in North American supermarkets. After being peeled completely, it is cooked in one of two ways: cut into small cubes and cooked in broth with fresh coriander and chard and served as an accompaniment to meat stew, or sliced and cooked with minced meat and tomato sauce.[87]

Greece

In Greece, taro grows on Icaria. Icarians credit taro for saving them from famine during World War II. They boil it until tender and serve it as a salad.

Lebanon

In Lebanon, taro is known as kilkass and is grown mainly along the Mediterranean coast. The leaves and stems are not consumed in Lebanon and the variety grown produces round to slightly oblong tubers that vary in size from a tennis ball to a small cantaloupe. Kilkass is a very popular winter dish in Lebanon and is prepared in two ways: kilkass with lentils is a stew flavored with crushed garlic and lemon juice and ’il’as (Lebanese pronunciation of قلقاس) bi-tahini. Another common method of preparing taro is to boil, peel then slice it into 1 cm (12 in) thick slices, before frying and marinating in edible "red" sumac. In northern Lebanon, it is known as a potato with the name borshoushi (el-orse borshushi). It is also prepared as part of a lentil soup with crushed garlic and lemon juice. Also in the north, it is known by the name bouzmet, mainly around Menieh, where it is first peeled, and left to dry in the sun for a couple of days. After that, it is stir-fried in lots of vegetable oil in a casserole until golden brown, then a large amount of wedged, melted onions are added, in addition to water, chickpeas and some seasoning. These are all left to simmer for a few hours, and the result is a stew-like dish. It is considered a hard-to-make delicacy, not only because of the tedious preparation but the consistency and flavour that the taro must reach. The smaller variety of taro is more popular in the north due to its tenderness.

Portugal

In the Azores taro is known as inhame or inhame-coco and is commonly steamed with potatoes, vegetables and meats or fish. The leaves are sometimes cooked into soups and stews. It is also consumed as a dessert after first being steamed and peeled, then fried in vegetable oil or lard, and finally sprinkled with sugar, cinnamon and nutmeg. Taro grows abundantly in the fertile land of the Azores, as well as in creeks that are fed by mineral springs. Through migration to other countries, the inhame is found in the Azorean diaspora.

Spain

Taro root is consumed in the south of Spain. Taro has remained popular in the Canary Islands. In the Canary Islands it is known as ñame and is often used in thick vegetable stews, like potaje de berros (cress potage).[88] Taro is called ñame (which normally designates yams) in Canarian Spanish and is a common crop in the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands (Canary Islands, Spain).

Turkey

Taro (Turkish: gölevez) is grown in the south coast of Turkey, especially in Mersin, Bozyazı, Anamur and Antalya. It is boiled in a tomato sauce or cooked with meat, beans and chickpeas. It is often used as a substitute for potato.

Africa

East Africa
 
Njahi, Nduma, Chapati, Kachumbari, chicken - an average Kikuyu party mix

In Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, taro is commonly known as arrow root, ggobe, or nduma and madhumbe in some local Bantu languages. It is usually boiled and eaten with tea or other beverages, or as the main starch of a meal. It is also cultivated in Madagascar, Malawi, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe.

South Africa

It is known as amadumbe (plural) or idumbe (singular) in the Zulu language of Southern Africa.

West Africa
 
Preparing taro in Cameroon

Taro is consumed as a staple crop in West Africa, particularly in Ghana, Nigeria and Cameroon. It is called cocoyam in Nigeria, Ghana and Anglophone Cameroon, macabo in Francophone Cameroon, mankani in Hausa language, koko and lambo in Yoruba, and ede in Igbo language. Cocoyam is often boiled, fried, or roasted and eaten with a sauce. In Ghana, it substitutes for plantain in making fufu when plantains are out of season. It is also cut into small pieces to make a soupy baby food and appetizer called mpotompoto. It is also common in Ghana to find cocoyam chips (deep-fried slices, about 1 mm (132 in) thick). Cocoyam leaves, locally called kontomire in Ghana, are a popular vegetable for local sauces such as palaver sauce and egusi/agushi stew.[89] It is also commonly consumed in Guinea and parts of Senegal, as a leaf sauce or as a vegetable side, and is referred to as jaabere in the local Pulaar dialect.

Americas

Brazil

In Lusophone countries, inhame (pronounced Portuguese pronunciation: [ĩ ˈ ȷ̃ɐ̃mi], Portuguese pronunciation: [ˈ ȷ̃ɐ̃mi] or Portuguese pronunciation: [ĩˑˈɲɐ̃mi], literally "yam") and cará are the common names for various plants with edible parts of the genera Alocasia, Colocasia (family Araceae) and Dioscorea (family Dioscoreaceae), and its respective starchy edible parts, generally tubers, with the exception of Dioscorea bulbifera, called cará-moela (pronounced Portuguese pronunciation: [kɐˈɾa muˈɛlɐ], literally, "gizzard yam"), in Brazil and never deemed to be an inhame. Definitions of what constitutes an inhame and a cará vary regionally, but the common understanding in Brazil is that carás are potato-like in shape, while inhames are more oblong.

In the Brazilian Portuguese of the hotter and drier Northeastern region, both inhames and carás are called batata (literally, "potato"). For differentiation, potatoes are called batata-inglesa (literally, "English potato"), a name used in other regions and sociolects to differentiate it from the batata-doce, "sweet potato", ironic names since both were first cultivated by the indigenous peoples of South America, their native continent, and only later introduced in Europe by the colonizers.

Taros are often prepared like potatoes, eaten boiled, stewed or mashed, generally with salt and sometimes garlic as a condiment, as part of a meal (most often lunch or dinner).

Central America

In Belize, Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Panama, taro is eaten in soups, as a replacement for potatoes, and as chips. It is known locally as malanga (also malanga coco), a word of Bantu origin, and dasheen in Belize and Costa Rica, quiquizque in Nicaragua, and as otoe in Panama.

Haiti

In Haiti, it is usually called malanga, or taro. The corm is grated into a paste and deep-fried to make a fritter called Acra. Acra is a very popular street food in Haiti.

Jamaica

In Jamaica, taro is known as coco, cocoyam and dasheen. Corms with flesh which is white throughout are referred to as minty-coco. The leaves are also used to make Pepper Pot Soup which may include callaloo.

Suriname

In Suriname it is called tayer, taya, pomtayer or pongtaya. The taro root is called aroei by the native Indians and is commonly known as "Chinese tayer". The variety known as eddoe is also called Chinese tayer. It is a popular cultivar among the Maroon population in the interior, also because it is not adversely affected by high water levels. The dasheen variety, commonly planted in swamps, is rare, although appreciated for its taste. The closely related Xanthosoma species is the base for the popular Surinamese dish pom. The cooked taro leaf (taya-wiri, or tayerblad) is also a well-known green leafy vegetable.

Trinidad and Tobago

In Trinidad and Tobago, it is called dasheen. The leaves of the taro plant are used to make the Trinidadian variant of the Caribbean dish known as callaloo (which is made with okra, dasheen/taro leaves, coconut milk or creme and aromatic herbs) and it is also prepared similarly to steamed spinach. The root of the taro plant is often served boiled, accompanied by stewed fish or meat, curried, often with peas and eaten with roti, or in soups. The leaves are also sauteed with onions, hot pepper and garlic til they are melted to make a dish called "bhaji". This dish is popular with Indo-Trinidadian people. The leaves are also fried in a split pea batter to make "saheena", a fritter of Indian origin.

United States
 
Taro leaf-stems (petioles) for sale at a market in California, 2009

Taro has been grown for centuries in the United States, though it has never attained the same popularity as in Asian and Pacific nations. William Bartram observed South Carolina Sea Islands residents eating roasted roots of the plant, which they called tanya, in 1791, and by the 19th century it was common as a food crop from Charleston to Louisiana.[90] In the 1920s, dasheen[nb 1], as it was known, was highly touted by the Secretary of the Florida Department of Agriculture as a valuable crop for growth in muck fields.[92] Fellsmere, Florida, near the east coast, was a farming area deemed perfect for growing dasheen. It was used in place of potatoes and dried to make flour. Dasheen flour was said to make excellent pancakes when mixed with wheat flour. Since the late 20th century, taro chips have been available in many supermarkets and natural food stores, and taro is often used in American Chinatowns, in Chinese cuisine.

Venezuela
 
Chopped taro for preparing sopa de gallina

In Venezuela, taro is called ocumo chino or chino and used in soups and sancochos. Soups contain large chunks of several kinds of tubers, including ocumo chino, especially in the eastern part of the country, where West Indian influence is present. It is also used to accompany meats in parrillas (barbecue) or fried cured fish where yuca is not available. Ocumo is an indigenous name; chino means "Chinese", an adjective for produce that is considered exotic. Ocumo without the Chinese denomination is a tuber from the same family, but without taro's inside purplish color. Ocumo is the Venezuelan name for malanga, so ocumo chino means "Chinese malanga". Taro is always prepared boiled. No porridge form is known in the local cuisine.

West Indies

Taro is called dasheen,[91] in contrast to the smaller variety of corms called eddo, or tanya in the English speaking countries of the West Indies, and is cultivated and consumed as a staple crop in the region. There are differences among the roots mentioned above: taro or dasheen is mostly blue when cooked, tanya is white and very dry, and eddoes are small and very slimy.

In the Spanish-speaking countries of the Spanish West Indies taro is called ñame, the Portuguese variant of which (inhame) is used in former Portuguese colonies where taro is still cultivated, including the Azores and Brazil. In Puerto Rico[93] and Cuba, and the Dominican Republic it is sometimes called malanga or yautia. In some countries, such as Trinidad and Tobago, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and Dominica, the leaves and stem of the dasheen, or taro, are most often cooked and pureed into a thick liquid called callaloo, which is served as a side dish similar to creamed spinach. Callaloo is sometimes prepared with crab legs, coconut milk, pumpkin, and okra. It is usually served alongside rice or made into a soup along with various other roots.

Ornamental

It is also sold as an ornamental aquatic plant. It can be grown indoors with high humidity. In the UK, it has gained the Royal Horticultural Society's Award of Garden Merit.[94]

 
A matured variation of taro plant. With dark leaves that appear black, it's often referred to as "Black Magic".

Laboratory

It is also used for anthocyanin study experiments, especially with reference to abaxial and adaxial anthocyanic concentration.[95] A recent study has revealed honeycomb-like microstructures on the taro leaf that make the leaves superhydrophobic. The measured contact angle on the leaf in this study is around 148°.[96]

In Melissa K. Nelson's article Protecting the Sanctity of Native Foods, scientists at the University of Hawaii attempted to patent and genetically alter taro before being dissuaded by activists and farmers, "In 2006, the University of Hawaii withdrew its patents on the three varieties and agreed to stop genetically modifying Hawaii forms of taro. Researchers continue to experiment with modifying a Chinese form of taro, however."[97]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The word dasheen originated in Trinidad and is said to be a corruption of de la Chine or da Chine, i.e. taro de la Chine.[91]

References

  1. ^ T. K. Lim (3 December 2014). Edible Medicinal and Non Medicinal Plants: Volume 9, Modified Stems, Roots, Bulbs. Springer. pp. 454–460. ISBN 978-94-017-9511-1.
  2. ^ "Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott". Retrieved 15 February 2015.
  3. ^ Umberto Quattrocchi (19 April 2016). CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants: Common Names, Scientific Names, Eponyms, Synonyms, and Etymology. CRC Press. pp. 1060–1061. ISBN 978-1-4822-5064-0.
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  5. ^ Blench, Roger (2009). "Vernacular Names for Taro in the Indo-Pacific Region and Their Possible Implications for Centres of Diversification and Spread" (PDF).
  6. ^ a b "Saru Patra Tarkari: A Classic Odia Dish Using Colocasia Leaves". Goya. 13 August 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2022.
  7. ^ natong. Mintz, Malcolm W. Bikol Dictionary. Volume II. Bikol-English Dictionary. Uniprint. Perth, Western Australia. 2004. p. 752 ISBN 0 9580383 5 X.
  8. ^ "Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott - Names of Plants in India". sites.google.com.
  9. ^ Ministry of Education, R.O.C. "臺灣閩南語常用詞辭典".
  10. ^ "vasa". 原住民族語言線上詞典 (in Chinese). Council of Indigenous Peoples. Retrieved 1 January 2021.
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Further reading

  • Hao, Sean (February 2, 2006). "Rain, pests and disease shrink taro production to record low". Honolulu Advertiser. p. C1.
  • "The Future of Kalo" Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine Vol.11 No. 5 (August 2006).
  • . Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine. July 2007. Archived from the original on October 8, 2011.
  • Stephens, James M. (May 1994). "HS592/MV059: Dasheen—Colocasia esculenta (L.) Schott". edis.ifas.ufl.edu. Florida Cooperative Extension Service, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, University of Florida. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  • . Green-Seeds.com. 2010-09-27. Archived from the original on 2010-09-27.
  • Taveuni Taro at fijitaro.com (Fiji taro industry history)
  • Viotti, V. (March 16, 2004). "Honolulu Advertiers". Honolulu Advertiser.
  • Wagner, Warren Lambert; Herbst, D. R.; Sohmer, S. H. (1999). Manual of the flowering plants of Hawai'i. Vol. 2. Univ. of Hawaii Press. p. 1357. OCLC 833763927.
  • Cho, J. J. (John Jayson) (2007). Hawaiian kalo, past and future. Cooperative Extension Service, College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, University of Hawaii at Manoa. OCLC 299067250. PDF
  • Yap, Weston (2012). "Kupuna Kalo". www.kupunakalo.com. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  • . Archived from the original on 2020-02-12.
  • "USA - Hawaii - Restoring the Life of the Land: Taro Patches in Hawai'i | The EcoTipping Points Project". ecotippingpoints.org. Retrieved 2022-10-17.
  • Complete Nutrition Facts for Taro

External links

  • Colocasia esculenta in West African plants – A Photo Guide.

taro, other, uses, disambiguation, confused, with, tarot, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, . For other uses see Taro disambiguation Not to be confused with tarot This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why November 2021 Taro ˈ t ɑː r oʊ ˈ t ae r oʊ Colocasia esculenta is a root vegetable It is the most widely cultivated species of several plants in the family Araceae that are used as vegetables for their corms leaves and petioles Taro corms are a food staple in African Oceanic and South Asian cultures similar to yams Taro is believed to be one of the earliest cultivated plants TaroScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade MonocotsOrder AlismatalesFamily AraceaeGenus ColocasiaSpecies C esculentaBinomial nameColocasia esculenta L SchottSynonyms 1 2 3 Alocasia dussii Dammer Alocasia illustris W Bull Aron colocasium L St Lag Arum chinense L Arum colocasia L Arum colocasioides Desf Arum esculentum L Arum lividum Salisb Arum nymphaeifolium Vent Roxb Arum peltatum Lam Caladium acre R Br Caladium colocasia L W Wight nom illeg Caladium colocasioides Desf Brongn Caladium esculentum L Vent Caladium glycyrrhizum Fraser Caladium nymphaeifolium Vent Caladium violaceum Desf Caladium violaceum Engl Calla gaby Blanco Calla virosa Roxb Colocasia acris R Br Schott Colocasia aegyptiaca Samp Colocasia colocasia L Huth nom inval Colocasia euchlora K Koch amp Linden Colocasia fonstanesii Schott Colocasia gracilis Engl Colocasia himalensis Royle Colocasia neocaledonica Van Houtte Colocasia nymphaeifolia Vent Kunth Colocasia peltata Lam Samp Colocasia vera Hassk Colocasia violacea Desf auct Colocasia virosa Roxb Kunth Colocasia vulgaris Raf Leucocasia esculenta L Nakai Steudnera virosa Roxb Prain Zantedeschia virosa Roxb K Koch Contents 1 Names and etymology 2 Taxonomy and ecology 2 1 Nomenclature and related plants 2 2 Description 2 3 Distribution and habitat 3 History 4 Cultivation 5 Uses 5 1 Culinary 5 1 1 Oceania 5 1 1 1 Cook Islands 5 1 1 2 Fiji 5 1 1 3 Hawaii 5 1 1 3 1 Social roles 5 1 1 3 2 Loʻi 5 1 1 3 3 History 5 1 1 4 Papua New Guinea 5 1 1 5 Polynesia 5 1 1 6 Samoa 5 1 1 7 Tonga 5 1 2 East Asia 5 1 2 1 China 5 1 2 2 Japan 5 1 2 3 Korea 5 1 2 4 Taiwan 5 1 3 Southeast Asia 5 1 3 1 Indonesia 5 1 3 2 Philippines 5 1 3 3 Thailand 5 1 3 4 Vietnam 5 1 4 South Asia 5 1 4 1 Bangladesh 5 1 4 2 India 5 1 4 3 Maldives 5 1 4 4 Nepal 5 1 4 5 Pakistan 5 1 4 6 Sri Lanka 5 1 5 Middle East and Europe 5 1 5 1 Cyprus 5 1 5 2 Egypt 5 1 5 3 Greece 5 1 5 4 Lebanon 5 1 5 5 Portugal 5 1 5 6 Spain 5 1 5 7 Turkey 5 1 6 Africa 5 1 6 1 East Africa 5 1 6 2 South Africa 5 1 6 3 West Africa 5 1 7 Americas 5 1 7 1 Brazil 5 1 7 2 Central America 5 1 7 3 Haiti 5 1 7 4 Jamaica 5 1 7 5 Suriname 5 1 7 6 Trinidad and Tobago 5 1 7 7 United States 5 1 7 8 Venezuela 5 1 7 9 West Indies 5 2 Ornamental 5 3 Laboratory 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksNames and etymology EditThe English term taro was borrowed from the Maori language when Captain Cook first observed Colocasia plantations there in 1769 The form taro or talo is widespread among Polynesian languages 4 taro in Tahitian talo in Samoan and Tongan kalo in Hawaiian taʻo in Marquesan All these forms originate from Proto Polynesian talo 4 which itself descended from Proto Oceanic talos cf dalo in Fijian and Proto Austronesian tales cf tales in Javanese However irregularity in sound correspondences among the cognate forms in Austronesian suggests that the term may have been borrowed and spread from an Austroasiatic language perhaps in Borneo cf proto Mon Khmer t2rawʔ Khasi shriew Khmu sroʔ 5 In the Odia language it is called Saru ସ ର 6 In India it is widely used in the Odisha region 6 In Cyprus Colocasia has been in use since the Roman Empire Today it is known as kolokasi Kolokasi It is usually cooked with celery and pork or chicken in a tomato sauce in casserole Baby kolokasi is called poulles after being fried dry red wine and coriander seed are added and then it is served with freshly squeezed lemon Lately some restaurants have begun serving thin slices of kolokasi deep fried calling them kolokasi chips Names for taro Name Language regionColocasi Kolokasi Greek Cypriot Greekgabi Tagalogube Tagalogaba Ilocos Regionnatong apay Bicol Region 7 ede Igbokoko lambo Yorubakontomire Akanjimbi Swahiliarbi अरब Hindikesave ಕ ಸವ Kannadasaru ସ ର Odiaalu आळ Marathiarvi ਅਰਵ Punjabipidalu प ड ल Nepalichempu ச ம ப Tamilchama చ మ Teluguyendem ꯌ ꯟꯗ ꯝ Meiteiventi व ट Konkanichembŭ ച മ പ Malayalamkochu কচ Bengali 8 芋 yu 芋頭 yutou Chinese芋 ō u or 芋仔 ō a Taiwanese Hokkien 9 vasa Paiwan 10 tali Amis 11 12 ක ර අළ SinhalaArikanchan Maithili 13 토란 Torahn KoreanOther names include amadumbe or madumbi in the Zulu language 14 boina in Wolaita language of Ethiopia amateke in Kirundi and Kinyarwanda 15 In Madagascar it is known as saonjo It is called eddo in Liberia It is dasheen in Trinidad and Tobago Saint Lucia and Jamaica 16 23 The leaves are know are known as dasheen bush bhaji by Indo Trinidadian and Tobagonians 17 In Portuguese it is known as taro inhame inhame coco taioba taiova taioba de sao tome or matabala 18 19 and in Spanish it is called malanga 20 21 In the Sinhala language of Sri Lanka it is called Kiri Ala ක ර අල but malanga is a different species 22 The Ancient Greek word kolokasion kolokasion lit lotus root is the origin of the Modern Greek word kolokasi kolokasi the word kolokas in both Greek and Turkish and qolqas قلقاس in Arabic It was borrowed in Latin as colocasia hence the genus name Colocasia 23 24 Taro is among the most widely grown species in the group of tropical perennial plants that are referred to as elephant ears when grown as ornamental plants 25 In the Philippines the whole plant is usually referred to as gabi while the corm is called taro Taro is very popular flavor for milktea in the country and just as popular ingredient in several Flipino savory dishes such as sinigang Taxonomy and ecology EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Nomenclature and related plants Edit Linnaeus originally described two species Colocasia esculenta and Colocasia antiquorum but many later botanists consider them both to be members of a single very variable species the correct name for which is Colocasia esculenta 26 27 The specific epithet esculenta means edible in Latin Taro is related to Xanthosoma and Caladium plants commonly grown ornamentally and like them it is sometimes loosely called elephant ear Similar taro varieties include giant taro Alocasia macrorrhizos swamp taro Cyrtosperma merkusii and arrowleaf elephant s ear Xanthosoma sagittifolium Description Edit Colocasia esculenta is a perennial tropical plant primarily grown as a root vegetable for its edible starchy corm The plant has rhizomes of different shapes and sizes Leaves are up to 40 cm 24 8 cm 15 3 4 in 9 3 4 in and sprout from the rhizome They are dark green above and light green beneath They are triangular ovate sub rounded and mucronate at the apex with the tip of the basal lobes rounded or sub rounded The petiole is 0 8 1 2 m 2 ft 7 in 3 ft 11 in high The path can be up to 25 cm 10 in long The spadix is about three fifths as long as the spathe with flowering parts up to 8 mm 5 16 in in diameter The female portion is at the fertile ovaries intermixed with sterile white ones Neuters grow above the females and are rhomboid or irregular orium lobed with six or eight cells The appendage is shorter than the male portion Flower Leaves Corms Corm cross section Distribution and habitat Edit Colocasia esculenta is thought to be native to Southern India and Southeast Asia but is widely naturalised 28 29 Colocasia is thought to have originated in the Indomalayan realm perhaps in East India Nepal and Bangladesh It spread by cultivation eastward into Southeast Asia East Asia and the Pacific Islands westward to Egypt and the eastern Mediterranean Basin and then southward and westward from there into East Africa and West Africa where it spread to the Caribbean and Americas Taro was probably first native to the lowland wetlands of Malaysia where it is called taloes In Australia Colocasia esculenta var aquatilis is thought to be native to the Kimberley region of Western Australia the common variety esculenta is now naturalised and considered an invasive weed in Western Australia the Northern Territory Queensland and New South Wales In Europe Colocasia esculenta is cultivated in Cyprus and it s called Colocasi Kolokasi in Greek and it is certified as a PDO product It is also found in the Greek island of Ikaria and cited as a vital source of food for the island during WW II 30 In Turkey Colocasia esculenta is locally known as golevez and mainly grown on the Mediterranean coast such as the Alanya district of Antalya Province and the Anamur district of Mersin Province In Macaronesia this plant has become naturalized probably as a result of the Portuguese discoveries and is frequently used in the macaronesian diet as an important carb source In the southeastern United States this plant is recognized as an invasive species 31 32 33 34 35 Many populations can be commonly found growing near drain ditches and bayous in Houston Texas History EditTaro is one of the most ancient cultivated crops 36 37 Taro is found widely in tropical and subtropical regions of South Asia East Asia Southeast Asia and Papua New Guinea and northern Australia and in Maldives Taro is highly polymorphic making taxonomy and distinction between wild and cultivated types difficult It is believed that they were domesticated independently multiple times with authors giving possible locations as New Guinea Mainland Southeast Asia and northeastern India based largely on the assumed native range of the wild plants 38 39 40 However more recent studies have pointed out that wild taro may have a much larger native distribution than previously believed and wild breeding types may also likely be indigenous to other parts of Island Southeast Asia 41 42 Archaeological traces of taro exploitation have been recovered from numerous sites though whether these were cultivated or wild types can not be ascertained They include the Niah Caves of Borneo around 10 000 years ago 43 Ille Cave of Palawan dated to at least 11 000 year ago 43 44 Kuk Swamp of New Guinea dated to between 8250 BC and 7960 BC 45 46 and Kilu Cave in the Solomon Islands dated to around 28 000 to 20 000 years ago 47 In the case of Kuk Swamp there is evidence of formalized agriculture emerging by about 10 000 years ago with evidence of cultivated plots though which plant was cultivated remains unknown 48 Taro were carried into the Pacific Islands by Austronesian peoples from around 1300 BC where they became a staple crop of Polynesians along with other types of taros like Alocasia macrorrhizos Amorphophallus paeoniifolius and Cyrtosperma merkusii They are the most important and the most preferred among the four because they were less likely to contain the irritating raphides present in the other plants 49 50 Taro is also identified as one of the staples of Micronesia from archaeological evidence dating back to the pre colonial Latte Period c 900 1521 AD indicating that it was also carried by Micronesians when they colonized the islands 51 52 Taro pollen and starch residue have also been identified in Lapita sites dated to between 1100 BC and 550 BC 53 Taro was later spread to Madagascar as early as the 1st century AD 54 Cultivation Edit One of the largest taro growing areas in the Hawaiian Islands is on Kauaʻi in the Lower Hanalei Valley Geographic distribution of taro production Taro output in 2009 At around 3 3 million metric tons per year Nigeria is the largest producer of taro in the world Taro can be grown in paddy fields where water is abundant or in upland situations where water is supplied by rainfall or supplemental irrigation Taro is one of the few crops along with rice and lotus that can be grown under flooded conditions This is due to air spaces in the petiole which permit underwater gaseous exchange with the atmosphere For a maximum dissolved oxygen supply the water should be cool and flowing Warm stagnant water causes basal rotting For maximum yields the water level should be controlled so that the base of the plant is always under water Flooded cultivation has some advantages over dry land cultivation higher yields about double out of season production which may result in higher prices and weed control which flooding facilitates On the other hand in flooded production systems taro requires a longer maturation period investment in infrastructure and higher operational costs and monoculture is likely Like most root crops taro and eddoes do well in deep moist or even swampy soils where the annual rainfall exceeds 2 500 mm 100 in Eddoes are more resistant to drought and cold The crop attains maturity within six to twelve months after planting in dry land cultivation and after twelve to fifteen months in wetland cultivation The crop is harvested when the plant height decreases and the leaves turn yellow These signals are usually less distinct in flooded taro cultivation Harvesting is usually done by hand tools even in mechanized production systems First the soil around the corm is loosened and then the corm is pulled up by grabbing the base of the petioles The global average yield is 6 2 tonnes per hectare 2 8 short tons per acre but varies according to the region In Asia average yields reach 12 6 t ha 5 6 short ton acre 55 Top taro producers of 2017 56 million tonnes Country Production Nigeria 3 3 China 1 9 Cameroon 1 8 Ghana 1 2 Papua New Guinea 0 3World total 10 2Uses EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Culinary Edit Peeled taro corms Taro cooked without saltNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy594 kJ 142 kcal Carbohydrates34 6 gSugars0 49Dietary fiber5 1 gFat0 11 gProtein0 52 gVitaminsQuantity DV Thiamine B1 9 0 107 mgRiboflavin B2 2 0 028 mgNiacin B3 3 0 51 mgPantothenic acid B5 7 0 336 mgVitamin B625 0 331 mgFolate B9 5 19 mgVitamin C6 5 mgVitamin D8 1 2 mgVitamin E20 2 93 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium2 18 mgIron6 0 72 mgMagnesium8 30 mgManganese21 0 449 mgPhosphorus11 76 mgPotassium10 484 mgZinc3 0 27 mgLink to USDA Database entryUnits mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Source USDA FoodData CentralIt is a food staple in African Oceanic and South Asian cultures 37 Taro leaves rawNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy177 kJ 42 kcal Carbohydrates6 7 gSugars3 gDietary fiber3 7 gFat0 74 gProtein5 gVitaminsQuantity DV Vitamin A equiv beta Carotenelutein zeaxanthin30 241 mg27 2895 mg1932 mgThiamine B1 18 0 209 mgRiboflavin B2 38 0 456 mgNiacin B3 10 1 513 mgVitamin B611 0 146 mgFolate B9 32 126 mgVitamin C63 52 mgVitamin E13 2 02 mgVitamin K103 108 6 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium11 107 mgIron17 2 25 mgMagnesium13 45 mgManganese34 0 714 mgPhosphorus9 60 mgPotassium14 648 mgZinc4 0 41 mgLink to USDA Database entryUnits mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Source USDA FoodData CentralPeople usually consume its edible corm and leaves The corms which have a light purple color due to phenolic pigments 57 are roasted baked or boiled The natural sugars give a sweet nutty flavor The starch is easily digestible and since the grains are fine and small it is often used for baby food Young taro leaves and stems can be eaten after boiling twice to remove the acrid flavor The leaves are a good source of vitamins A and C and contain more protein than the corms In its raw form the plant is toxic due to the presence of calcium oxalate 58 59 and the presence of needle shaped raphides in the plant cells However the toxin can be minimized and the tuber rendered palatable by cooking 60 or by steeping in cold water overnight Corms of the small round variety are peeled and boiled then sold either frozen bagged in their own liquids or canned Oceania Edit Cook Islands Edit Taro is the pre eminent crop of the Cook Islands and surpasses all other crops in terms of land area devoted to production The prominence of the crop there has led it to be a staple of the population s diet Taro is grown across the country but the method of cultivation depends on the nature of the island it is grown on Taro also plays an important role in the country s export trade 61 The root is eaten boiled as is standard across Polynesia Taro leaves are also eaten cooked with coconut milk onion and meat or fish 62 Fiji Edit Fijian lovo of cooked staples taro and cassava white Taro dalo in Fijian has been a staple of the Fijian diet for centuries and its cultural importance is celebrated on Taro Day Its growth as an export crop began in 1993 when taro leaf blight 63 decimated the taro industry in neighboring Samoa Fiji filled the void and was soon supplying taro internationally Almost 80 of Fiji s exported taro comes from the island of Taveuni where the taro beetle species Papuana uninodis is absent The Fijian taro industry on the main islands of Viti Levu and Vanua Levu faces constant damage from the beetles The Fiji Ministry of Agriculture and the Land Resources Division of the Secretariat of the Pacific Community SPC are researching pest control and instigating quarantine restrictions to prevent the spread of the pest Taveuni now exports pest damage free crops Hawaii Edit Kalo is taro s Hawaiian name The local crop plays an important role in Hawaiian culture and mythology Taro is a traditional staple of the native cuisine of Hawaii Some of the uses for taro include poi table taro steamed and served like a potato taro chips and luʻau leaf to make laulau In Hawaii kalo is farmed under either dryland or wetland conditions Taro farming there is challenging because of the difficulties of accessing fresh water Kalo is usually grown in pond fields known as loʻi Typical dryland or upland varieties varieties grown in watered but not flooded fields are lehua maoli and bun long the latter widely known as Chinese taro Bun long is used for making taro chips Dasheen also called eddo is another dryland variety cultivated for its corms or as an ornamental plant A contemporary Hawaiian diet consists of many tuberous plants particularly sweet potato and kalo The Hawaii Agricultural Statistics Service determined the 10 year median production of kalo to be about 6 1 million pounds 2 800 t 64 However 2003 taro production was only 5 million pounds 2 300 t the lowest since record keeping began in 1946 The previous low 1997 was 5 5 million pounds 2 500 t Despite generally growing demand production was even lower in 2005 only 4 million pounds with kalo for processing into poi accounting for 97 5 65 Urbanization is one cause driving down harvests from the 1948 high of 14 1 million pounds 6 400 t but more recently the decline has resulted from pests and diseases A non native apple snail Pomacea canaliculata is a major culprit along with a plant rot disease traced to a species of fungus in the genus Phytophthora that now damages kalo crops throughout Hawaii Although pesticides could control both problems to some extent pesticide use in the loʻi is banned because of the opportunity for chemicals to migrate quickly into streams and then eventually the sea 64 65 Social roles Edit Cleaning the kalo Sandwich Islands 1852 watercolour by James Gay Sawkins Important aspects of Hawaiian culture revolve around kalo For example the newer name for a traditional Hawaiian feast the luʻau comes from kalo Young kalo tops baked with coconut milk and chicken meat or octopus arms are frequently served at luaus 66 By ancient Hawaiian custom fighting is not allowed when a bowl of poi is open It is also disrespectful to fight in front of an elder and one should not raise their voice speak angrily or make rude comments or gestures Loʻi Edit Several small loʻi pondfields in which kalo taro is being grown in the Maunawili Valley on Oʻahu Hawaiʻi The ditch on the left in the picture is called an ʻauwai and supplies diverted stream water to the loʻi A loʻi is a patch of wetland dedicated to growing kalo Hawaiians have traditionally used irrigation to produce kalo Wetland fields produce ten to fifteen times more kalo per acre than dry fields 67 Wetland grown kalo need a constant flow of water About 300 varieties of kalo were originally brought to Hawaiʻi about 100 remain The kalo plant takes seven months to grow until harvest so lo i fields are used in rotation and the soil can be replenished while the loʻi in use has sufficient water Stems are typically replanted in the lo i for future harvests History Edit One mythological version of Hawaiian ancestry cites the taro plant as an ancestor to Hawaiians Legend joins two siblings of high and divine rank Papahanaumoku Papa from whom lands are born or Earth mother and Wakea Sky father Together they create the islands of Hawaii and a beautiful woman Hoʻohokukalani The Heavenly one who made the stars 68 The story of kalo begins when Wakea and Papa conceived their daughter Hoʻohokukalani Daughter and father then conceived a child together named Haloanakalaukapalili Long stalk trembling but it was stillborn After the father and daughter buried the child near their house a kalo plant grew over the grave 69 The stems were slender and when the wind blew they swayed and bent as though paying homage their heart shaped leaves shivering gracefully as in hula And in the center of each leaf water gathered like a mother s teardrop 70 The second child born of Wakea and Hoʻohokukalani was named Haloa after his older brother The kalo of the earth was the sustenance for the young brother and became the principal food for successive generations 71 The Hawaiian word for family ʻohana is derived from ʻoha the shoot that grows from the kalo corm As young shoots grow from the corm of the kalo plant so people too grow from their family 72 Papua New Guinea Edit The taro corm is a traditional staple crop for large parts of Papua New Guinea with a domestic trade extending its consumption to areas where it is not traditionally grown Taro from some regions has developed particularly good reputations with for instance Lae taro being highly prized Among the Urapmin people of Papua New Guinea taro known in Urap as ima is the main source of sustenance along with the sweet potato Urap wan In fact the word for food in Urap is a compound of these two words 73 Polynesia Edit Considered the staple starch of traditional Polynesian cuisine taro is both a common and prestigious food item that was first introduced to the Polynesian islands by prehistoric seafarers of Southeast Asian derivation The tuber itself is prepared in various ways including baking steaming in earth ovens umu or imu boiling and frying The famous Hawaiian staple poi is made by mashing steamed taro roots with water Taro also features in traditional desserts such as Samoan fa ausi which consists of grated cooked taro mixed with coconut milk and brown sugar The leaves of the taro plant also feature prominently in Polynesian cooking especially as edible wrappings for dishes such as Hawaiian laulau Fijian and Samoan palusami wrapped around onions and coconut milk and Tongan lupulu wrapped corned beef Ceremonial presentations on occasion of chiefly rites or communal events weddings funerals etc traditionally included the ritual presentation of raw and cooked taro roots plants The Hawaiian laulau traditionally contains pork fish and lu au cooked taro leaf The wrapping is inedible ti leaves Hawaiian lau ki Cooked taro leaf has the consistency of cooked spinach and is therefore unsuitable for use as a wrapping Samoa Edit Taro corms cooked with pig on the Samoan umu In Samoa the baby talo leaves and coconut milk are wrapped into parcels and cooked along with other food in an earth oven The parcels are called palusami or lu au The resulting taste is smoky sweet savory and has a unique creamy texture The root is also baked Talo tao in the umu or boiled with coconut cream Faalifu Talo It has a slightly bland and starchy flavor It is sometimes called the Polynesian potato Tonga Edit Lu is the Tongan word for the edible leaves of the taro plant called talo in Tonga as well as the traditional dish made using them This meal is still prepared for special occasions and especially on Sunday The dish consists of chopped meat onions and coconut milk wrapped in a number of taro leaves lu talo This is then wrapped traditionally in a banana leaf nowadays aluminum foil is often used and put in the ʻumu to cook It has a number of named varieties dependent on the filling Lu pulu lu with beef commonly using imported corned beef kapapulu Lu sipi lu with lamb Lu moa lu with chicken Lu hoosi lu with horse meatOceanian AtollsThe islands situated along the border of the three main parts of Oceania Polynesia Micronesia and Melanesia are more prone to being atolls rather than volcanic islands most prominently Tuvalu Tokelau and Kiribati As a result of this Taro was not a part of the traditional diet due to the infertile soil and have only become a staple today through importation from other islands Taro and Cassava cultivars are usually imported from Fiji or Samoa The traditional staple however is the Swamp Taro known as Pulaka or Babai a distant relative of the Taro but with a very long growing phase 3 5 years larger and denser corms and coarser leaves It is grown in a patch of land dug out to give rise to the freshwater lense beneath the soil The lengthy growing time of this crop usually confines it as a food during festivities much like Pork although it can be preserved by drying out in the sun and storing it somewhere cool and dry to be enjoyed out of harvesting season East Asia Edit China Edit Taro simplified Chinese 芋头 traditional Chinese 芋頭 pinyin yutou Cantonese Yale wuhtau is commonly used as a main course as steamed taro with or without sugar as a substitute for other cereals in Chinese cuisine in a variety of styles and provinces steamed boiled or stir fried as a main dish and as a flavor enhancing ingredient In Northern China it is often boiled or steamed then peeled and eaten with or without sugar much like a potato It is commonly braised with pork or beef It is used in the Cantonese dim sum to make a small plated dish called taro dumpling as well as a pan fried dish called taro cake It can also be shredded into long strips which are woven together to form a seafood birdsnest In Fujian cuisine it is steamed or boiled and mixed with starch to form a dough for dumpling Taro cake is a delicacy traditionally eaten during Chinese New Year celebrations As a dessert it can be mashed into a puree or used as a flavoring in tong sui ice cream and other desserts such as Sweet Taro Pie McDonald s sells taro flavored pies in China Taro is mashed in the dessert known as taro puree Taro paste also known as Or Nee is a famous traditional Chaoshan dessert from China Taro paste a traditional Cantonese cuisine which originated from the Chaoshan region in the eastern part of China s Guangdong Province is a dessert made primarily from taro The taro is steamed and then mashed into a thick paste which forms the base of the dessert Lard or fried onion oil is then added for fragrance The dessert is traditionally sweetened with water chestnut syrup and served with ginkgo nuts Modern versions of the dessert include the addition of coconut cream and sweet corn The dessert is commonly served at traditional Teochew wedding banquet dinners as the last course marking the end of the banquet Japan Edit Excavated Japanese satoimo root stems are cut before the plant is dug up 1 Remaining stem from parent or seed satoimo 2 Parent or seed satoimo 3 Remaining stem from child satoimo 4 Child satoimo 5 Grandchild satoimo Colocasia esculenta from the Japanese agricultural encyclopedia Seikei Zusetsu A similar plant in Japan is called satoimo 里芋 サトイモ literally village potato The child and grandchild corms cormels cormlets which bud from the parent satoimo are called koimo 子芋 and magoimo 孫芋 respectively or more generally imonoko 芋の子 Satoimo has been propagated in Southeast Asia since the late Jōmon period It was a regional staple before rice became predominant The tuber satoimo is often prepared through simmering in fish stock dashi and soy sauce The stalk zuiki ja can also be prepared a number of ways depending on the variety 74 Korea Edit Toran guk taro soup In Korea taro is called toran Korean 토란 earth egg and the corm is stewed and the leaf stem is stir fried Taro roots can be used for medicinal purposes particularly for treating insect bites It is made into the Korean traditional soup toranguk 토란국 Taro stems are often used as an ingredient in yukgaejang 육개장 Taiwan Edit Small ball of mashed taro paste served on a banana leaf in a restaurant of the Daan district Taipei In Taiwan taro yutou 芋頭 in Mandarin and ō a 芋仔 in Taiwanese is well adapted to Taiwanese climate and can grow almost anywhere in the country with minimal maintenance Before the Taiwan Miracle made rice affordable to everyone taro was one of the main staples in Taiwan Nowadays taro is used more often in desserts Supermarket varieties range from about the size and shape of a brussels sprout to longer larger varieties the size of a football Taro chips are often used as a potato chip like snack Compared to potato chips taro chips are harder and have a nuttier flavor Another popular traditional Taiwanese snack is taro ball served on ice or deep fried It is common to see taro as a flavor in desserts and drinks such as bubble tea Southeast Asia Edit Indonesia Edit In Indonesia taro is widely used for snacks cakes crackers and even macarons thus it can be easily found everywhere Some varieties are specially cultivated in accordance with social or geographical traditions Taro is usually known as keladi although other varieties are also known as talas among others Chinese descendants in Indonesia often eat taro with stewed rice and dried shrimp The taro is diced and cooked along with the rice the shrimp and sesame oil Philippines Edit Laing In the Philippines taro is usually called gabi abi or avi and is widely available throughout the archipelago Its adaptability to marshland and swamps make it one of the most common vegetables in the Philippines The leaves stems and corms are all consumed and form part of the local cuisine A popular recipe for taro is laing from the Bicol Region the dish s main ingredients are taro leaves at times including stems cooked in coconut milk and salted with fermented shrimp or fish bagoong 75 It is sometimes heavily spiced with red hot chilies called siling labuyo Another dish in which taro is commonly used is the Philippine national stew sinigang although radish can be used if taro is not available This stew is made with pork and beef shrimp or fish a souring agent tamarind fruit kamias etc with the addition of peeled and diced corms as thickener The corm is also prepared as a basic ingredient for ginataan a coconut milk and taro dessert Thailand Edit In Thai cuisine taro Thai ephuxk pheuak is used in a variety of ways depending on the region Boiled taro is readily available in the market packaged in small cellophane bags already peeled and diced and eaten as a snack Pieces of boiled taro with coconut milk are a traditional Thai dessert 76 Raw taro is also often sliced and deep fried and sold in bags as chips ephuxkthxd As in other Asian countries taro is a popular flavor for ice cream in Thailand 77 Vietnam Edit Che khoai mon In Vietnam there is a large variety of taro plants One is called khoai mon which is used as a filling in spring rolls cakes puddings and sweet soup desserts smoothies and other desserts Taro is used in the Tết dessert che khoai mon which is sticky rice pudding with taro roots The stems are also used in soups such as canh chua One is called khoai sọ which is smaller in size than khoai mon Another common taro plant grows roots in shallow waters and grows stems and leaves above the surface of the water This taro plant has saponin like substances that cause a hot itchy feeling in the mouth and throat Northern farmers used to plant them to cook the stems and leaves to feed their hogs They re grew quickly from their roots After cooking the saponin in the soup of taro stems and leaves is reduced to a level the hogs can eat Today this practice is no longer popular in Vietnam agriculture These taro plants are commonly called khoai ngứa which literally means itchy potato South Asia Edit Taro roots are commonly known as Arbi or Arvi in Urdu and Hindi language It is a common dish in Northern India and Pakistan Arbi Gosht meat Masala Recipe is a delicious tangy mutton curry recipe with taro vegetable Mutton and Arbi is cooked in whole spices and tomatoes which lends a wonderful taste to the dish 78 Arbi Gosht Bangladesh Edit Kochu bata In Bangladesh taro is a very popular vegetable known as kochu কচ or mukhi ম খ Within the Sylheti language it is called mukhi It is usually cooked with small prawns or the ilish fish into a curry but some dishes are cooked with dried fish Its green leaves kochu pata কচ প ত and stem kochu কচ are also eaten as a favorite dish and usually ground to a paste or finely chopped to make shak but it must be boiled well beforehand Taro stolons or stems kochur loti কচ র লত are also favored by Bangladeshis and cooked with shrimp dried fish or the head of the ilish fish 79 Taro is available either fresh or frozen in the UK and US in most Asian stores and supermarkets specialising in Sylheti Bangladeshi or South Asian food Also another variety called maan kochu is consumed and is a rich source of vitamins and nutrients Maan Kochu is made into a paste and fried to prepare a delicious food known as Kochu Bata Taro stolons at a market in Dhaka India Edit Saru bhaja Patrode In India taro or eddoe is a common dish served in many ways In Gujarat it is called Patar Vel or Saryia Na Paan green leaves are used by making a roll with besan gram flour salt turmeric red chili powder all put into paste form inside leaves Then steamed and in small portions as well as fried in the deep fryer In Mizoram in north eastern India it is called bal the leaves stalks and corms are eaten as dawl bai The leaves and stalks are often traditionally preserved to be eaten in dry season as dawl rep bai 80 81 In Assam a north eastern state taro is known as kosu কচ Various parts of the plant are eaten by making different dishes The leaf buds called kosu loti কচ লত are cooked with sour dried fruits and called thekera থ ক ৰ or sometimes eaten alongside tamarind elephant apple a small amount of pulses or fish Similar dishes are prepared from the long root like structures called kosu thuri A sour fried dish is made from its flower kosu kala Porridges are made from the corms themselves which may also be boiled seasoned with salt and eaten as snacks In Manipur another north eastern state taro is known as pan The Kukis calls it bal Boiled bal is a snack at lunch along with chutney or hot chili flakes besides being cooked as a main dish along with smoked or dried meat beans and mustard leaves Sun dried taro leaves are later used in broth and stews It is widely available and is eaten in many forms either baked boiled or cooked into a curry with hilsa or with fermented soybeans called hawai zaar The leaves are also used in a special traditional dish called utti cooked with peas It is called arbi in Urdu Hindi and arvi in Punjabi in north India It is called kechu कच in Sanskrit 82 In Himachal Pradesh in northern India taro corms are known as ghandyali and the plant is known as kachalu in the Kangra and Mandi districts The dish called patrodu is made using taro leaves rolled with corn or gram flour and boiled in water Another dish pujji is made with mashed leaves and the trunk of the plant and ghandyali or taro corms are prepared as a separate dish In Shimla a pancake style dish called patra or patid is made using gram flour In Uttarakhand and neighboring Nepal taro is considered a healthy food and is cooked in a variety of ways The delicate gaderi taro variety of Kumaon especially from Lobanj Bageshwar district is much sought after Most commonly it is boiled in tamarind water until tender then diced into cubes which are stir fried in mustard oil with fenugreek leaves Another technique for preparation is boiling it in salt water till it is reduced to a porridge The young leaves called gaaba are steamed sun dried and stored for later use Taro leaves and stems are pickled Crushed leaves and stems are mixed with de husked urad daal black lentils and then dried as small balls called badi These stems may also be sun dried and stored for later use On auspicious days women worship saptarshi seven sages and only eat rice with taro leaves In Maharashtra in western India the leaves called alu che paana are de veined and rolled with a paste of gram flour Then seasoned with tamarind paste red chili powder turmeric coriander asafoetida and salt and finally steamed These can be eaten whole cut into pieces or shallow fried and eaten as a snack known as alu chi wadi Alu chya panan chi patal bhaji a lentil and colocasia leaves curry is also popular In Goan as well as Konkani cuisine taro leaves are very popular A tall growing variety of taro is extensively used on the western coast of India to make patrode patrade or patrada lit leaf pancake a dish with gram flour tamarind and other spices In Gujarat it is called patar vel or saryia na paan Gram flour salt turmeric red chili powder made into paste and stuffed inside a roll of green taro leaves Then steamed and in small portions and then fried 83 Sindhis call it kachaloo they fry it compress it and re fry it to make a dish called tuk which complements Sindhi curry In Kerala a state in southern India taro corms are known as chembu kizhangu ച മ പ ക ഴങ ങ and are a staple food a side dish and an ingredient in various side dishes like sambar As a staple food it is steamed and eaten with a spicy chutney of green chilies tamarind and shallots The leaves and stems of certain varieties of taro are also used as a vegetable in Kerala In Dakshin Kannada in Karnataka it is used as a breakfast dish either made like fritters or steamed In Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh taro corms are known as sivapan kizhangu seppankilangu or cheppankilangu chamagadda or in coastal Andhra districts as chaama dumpa They can be prepared in a variety of ways such as by deep frying in oil to be eaten on the side with rice or cooking in a tangy tamarind sauce with spices onion and tomato In the east Indian state of West Bengal taro corms are thinly sliced and fried to make chips called kochu bhaja কচ ভ জ The stem is used to cook kochur saag কচ র শ গ with fried hilsha ilish head or boiled chhola chickpea often eaten as a starter with hot rice The corms are also made into a paste with spices and eaten with rice The most popular dish is a spicy curry made with prawn and taro corms Gathi kochu গ ঠ কচ taro variety are very popular and used to make a thick curry called gathi kochur dal গ ঠ কচ র ড ল Here kochur loti কচ র লত taro stolon dry curry 84 is a popular dish which is usually prepared with poppy seeds and mustard paste Leaves and corms of shola kochu শল কচ and maan kochu ম ন কচ are also used to make some popular traditional dishes In Mithila Bihar taro corms are known as edua अड आ and its leaves are called edikunch ke paat अड क च क प त A curry of taro leaves is made with mustard paste and sour sun dried mango pulp आम ल aamil In Odisha taro corms are known as saru Dishes made of taro include saru besara taro in mustard and garlic paste It is also an indispensable ingredient in preparing dalma an Odia cuisine staple vegetables cooked with dal Sliced taro corms deep fried in oil and mixed with red chili powder and salt are known as saru chips Maldives Edit Ala was widely grown in the southern atolls of Addu Atoll Fuvahmulah Huvadhu Atoll and Laamu Atoll and is considered a staple even after rice was introduced Ala and olhu ala are still widely eaten all over the Maldives cooked or steamed with salt to taste and eaten with grated coconut along with chili paste and fish soup It is also prepared as a curry The corms are sliced and fried to make chips and are also used to prepare varieties of sweets 85 Nepal Edit Arikanchan is prepared from taro leaves black lentils paste and spices in mostly the Eastern Terai of Nepal is traditional and indigenous food Taro is grown in the Terai and the hilly regions of Nepal The root corm of taro is known as pindalu प ड ल and petioles with leaves are known as karkalo कर कल Gava ग भ and also Kaichu क च in Maithili Almost all parts are eaten in different dishes Boiled corm of Taro is commonly served with salt spices and chilies Taro is a popular dish in the hilly region Chopped leaves and petioles are mixed with Urad bean flour to make dried balls called maseura मस य र Large taro leaves are used as an alternative to an umbrella when unexpected rain occurs Popular attachment to taro since ancient times is reflected in popular culture such as in songs and textbooks Jivan hamro karkala ko pani jastai ho ज वन ह म र कर कल क प न जस त ह means Our life is as vulnerable as water stuck in the leaf of taro Taro is cultivated and eaten by the Tharu people in the Inner Terai as well Roots are mixed with dried fish and turmeric then dried in cakes called sidhara which are curried with radish chili garlic and other spices to accompany rice The Tharu prepare the leaves in a fried vegetable side dish that also shows up in Maithili cuisine 86 Pakistan Edit Arvi gosht In Pakistan taro or eddoe or arvi is a very common dish served with or without gravy a popular dish is arvi gosht which includes beef lamb or mutton The leaves are rolled along with gram flour batter and then fried or steamed to make a dish called Pakora which is finished by tempering with red chilies and carrom ajwain seeds Taro or arvi is also cooked with chopped spinach The dish called Arvi Palak is the second most renowned dish made of Taro Sri Lanka Edit Many varieties are recorded in Sri Lanka several being edible others being toxic to humans and therefore not cultivated Edible varieties kiri ala kolakana ala gahala and sevel ala are cultivated for their corms and leaves Sri Lankans eat corms after boiling them or making them into a curry with coconut milk The leaves of only two variety kolakana ala and kalu alakola are eaten Middle East and Europe Edit Taro was consumed by the early Romans in much the same way the potato is today They called this root vegetable colocasia The Roman cookbook Apicius mentions several methods for preparing taro including boiling preparing with sauces and cooking with meat or fowl After the fall of the Roman Empire the use of taro dwindled in Europe This was largely due to the decline of trade and commerce with Egypt previously controlled by Rome When the Spanish and Portuguese sailed to the new world they brought taro along with them Recently when there has been renewed interest in exotic foods and consumption is increasing Cyprus Edit In Cyprus taro has been in use since the time of the Roman Empire Today it is known as kolokas in Turkish or kolokasi kolokasi in Greek which comes from the Ancient Greek name kolokasion kolokasion for lotus root It is usually sauteed with celery and onion with pork chicken or lamb in a tomato sauce a vegetarian version is also available The cormlets are called poulles sing poulla and they are prepared by first being sauteed followed by decaramelising the vessel with dry red wine and coriander seeds and finally served with freshly squeezed lemon Egypt Edit In Egypt taro is known as qolqas Egyptian Arabic قلقاس IPA ʔolˈʔaeːs The corms are larger than what would be found in North American supermarkets After being peeled completely it is cooked in one of two ways cut into small cubes and cooked in broth with fresh coriander and chard and served as an accompaniment to meat stew or sliced and cooked with minced meat and tomato sauce 87 Greece Edit In Greece taro grows on Icaria Icarians credit taro for saving them from famine during World War II They boil it until tender and serve it as a salad Lebanon Edit In Lebanon taro is known as kilkass and is grown mainly along the Mediterranean coast The leaves and stems are not consumed in Lebanon and the variety grown produces round to slightly oblong tubers that vary in size from a tennis ball to a small cantaloupe Kilkass is a very popular winter dish in Lebanon and is prepared in two ways kilkass with lentils is a stew flavored with crushed garlic and lemon juice and il as Lebanese pronunciation of قلقاس bi tahini Another common method of preparing taro is to boil peel then slice it into 1 cm 1 2 in thick slices before frying and marinating in edible red sumac In northern Lebanon it is known as a potato with the name borshoushi el orse borshushi It is also prepared as part of a lentil soup with crushed garlic and lemon juice Also in the north it is known by the name bouzmet mainly around Menieh where it is first peeled and left to dry in the sun for a couple of days After that it is stir fried in lots of vegetable oil in a casserole until golden brown then a large amount of wedged melted onions are added in addition to water chickpeas and some seasoning These are all left to simmer for a few hours and the result is a stew like dish It is considered a hard to make delicacy not only because of the tedious preparation but the consistency and flavour that the taro must reach The smaller variety of taro is more popular in the north due to its tenderness Portugal Edit In the Azores taro is known as inhame or inhame coco and is commonly steamed with potatoes vegetables and meats or fish The leaves are sometimes cooked into soups and stews It is also consumed as a dessert after first being steamed and peeled then fried in vegetable oil or lard and finally sprinkled with sugar cinnamon and nutmeg Taro grows abundantly in the fertile land of the Azores as well as in creeks that are fed by mineral springs Through migration to other countries the inhame is found in the Azorean diaspora Spain Edit Taro root is consumed in the south of Spain Taro has remained popular in the Canary Islands In the Canary Islands it is known as name and is often used in thick vegetable stews like potaje de berros cress potage 88 Taro is called name which normally designates yams in Canarian Spanish and is a common crop in the Autonomous Community of the Canary Islands Canary Islands Spain Turkey Edit Taro Turkish golevez is grown in the south coast of Turkey especially in Mersin Bozyazi Anamur and Antalya It is boiled in a tomato sauce or cooked with meat beans and chickpeas It is often used as a substitute for potato Africa Edit East Africa Edit Njahi Nduma Chapati Kachumbari chicken an average Kikuyu party mix In Kenya Uganda and Tanzania taro is commonly known as arrow root ggobe or nduma and madhumbe in some local Bantu languages It is usually boiled and eaten with tea or other beverages or as the main starch of a meal It is also cultivated in Madagascar Malawi Mozambique and Zimbabwe South Africa Edit It is known as amadumbe plural or idumbe singular in the Zulu language of Southern Africa West Africa Edit Preparing taro in Cameroon Taro is consumed as a staple crop in West Africa particularly in Ghana Nigeria and Cameroon It is called cocoyam in Nigeria Ghana and Anglophone Cameroon macabo in Francophone Cameroon mankani in Hausa language koko and lambo in Yoruba and ede in Igbo language Cocoyam is often boiled fried or roasted and eaten with a sauce In Ghana it substitutes for plantain in making fufu when plantains are out of season It is also cut into small pieces to make a soupy baby food and appetizer called mpotompoto It is also common in Ghana to find cocoyam chips deep fried slices about 1 mm 1 32 in thick Cocoyam leaves locally called kontomire in Ghana are a popular vegetable for local sauces such as palaver sauce and egusi agushi stew 89 It is also commonly consumed in Guinea and parts of Senegal as a leaf sauce or as a vegetable side and is referred to as jaabere in the local Pulaar dialect Americas Edit Brazil Edit In Lusophone countries inhame pronounced Portuguese pronunciation ĩ ˈ ȷ ɐ mi Portuguese pronunciation ˈ ȷ ɐ mi or Portuguese pronunciation ĩˑˈɲɐ mi literally yam and cara are the common names for various plants with edible parts of the genera Alocasia Colocasia family Araceae and Dioscorea family Dioscoreaceae and its respective starchy edible parts generally tubers with the exception of Dioscorea bulbifera called cara moela pronounced Portuguese pronunciation kɐˈɾa muˈɛlɐ literally gizzard yam in Brazil and never deemed to be an inhame Definitions of what constitutes an inhame and a cara vary regionally but the common understanding in Brazil is that caras are potato like in shape while inhames are more oblong In the Brazilian Portuguese of the hotter and drier Northeastern region both inhames and caras are called batata literally potato For differentiation potatoes are called batata inglesa literally English potato a name used in other regions and sociolects to differentiate it from the batata doce sweet potato ironic names since both were first cultivated by the indigenous peoples of South America their native continent and only later introduced in Europe by the colonizers Taros are often prepared like potatoes eaten boiled stewed or mashed generally with salt and sometimes garlic as a condiment as part of a meal most often lunch or dinner Central America Edit In Belize Costa Rica Nicaragua and Panama taro is eaten in soups as a replacement for potatoes and as chips It is known locally as malanga also malanga coco a word of Bantu origin and dasheen in Belize and Costa Rica quiquizque in Nicaragua and as otoe in Panama Haiti Edit In Haiti it is usually called malanga or taro The corm is grated into a paste and deep fried to make a fritter called Acra Acra is a very popular street food in Haiti Jamaica Edit In Jamaica taro is known as coco cocoyam and dasheen Corms with flesh which is white throughout are referred to as minty coco The leaves are also used to make Pepper Pot Soup which may include callaloo Suriname Edit In Suriname it is called tayer taya pomtayer or pongtaya The taro root is called aroei by the native Indians and is commonly known as Chinese tayer The variety known as eddoe is also called Chinese tayer It is a popular cultivar among the Maroon population in the interior also because it is not adversely affected by high water levels The dasheen variety commonly planted in swamps is rare although appreciated for its taste The closely related Xanthosoma species is the base for the popular Surinamese dish pom The cooked taro leaf taya wiri or tayerblad is also a well known green leafy vegetable Trinidad and Tobago Edit In Trinidad and Tobago it is called dasheen The leaves of the taro plant are used to make the Trinidadian variant of the Caribbean dish known as callaloo which is made with okra dasheen taro leaves coconut milk or creme and aromatic herbs and it is also prepared similarly to steamed spinach The root of the taro plant is often served boiled accompanied by stewed fish or meat curried often with peas and eaten with roti or in soups The leaves are also sauteed with onions hot pepper and garlic til they are melted to make a dish called bhaji This dish is popular with Indo Trinidadian people The leaves are also fried in a split pea batter to make saheena a fritter of Indian origin United States Edit Taro leaf stems petioles for sale at a market in California 2009 Taro has been grown for centuries in the United States though it has never attained the same popularity as in Asian and Pacific nations William Bartram observed South Carolina Sea Islands residents eating roasted roots of the plant which they called tanya in 1791 and by the 19th century it was common as a food crop from Charleston to Louisiana 90 In the 1920s dasheen nb 1 as it was known was highly touted by the Secretary of the Florida Department of Agriculture as a valuable crop for growth in muck fields 92 Fellsmere Florida near the east coast was a farming area deemed perfect for growing dasheen It was used in place of potatoes and dried to make flour Dasheen flour was said to make excellent pancakes when mixed with wheat flour Since the late 20th century taro chips have been available in many supermarkets and natural food stores and taro is often used in American Chinatowns in Chinese cuisine Venezuela Edit Chopped taro for preparing sopa de gallina In Venezuela taro is called ocumo chino or chino and used in soups and sancochos Soups contain large chunks of several kinds of tubers including ocumo chino especially in the eastern part of the country where West Indian influence is present It is also used to accompany meats in parrillas barbecue or fried cured fish where yuca is not available Ocumo is an indigenous name chino means Chinese an adjective for produce that is considered exotic Ocumo without the Chinese denomination is a tuber from the same family but without taro s inside purplish color Ocumo is the Venezuelan name for malanga so ocumo chino means Chinese malanga Taro is always prepared boiled No porridge form is known in the local cuisine West Indies Edit Taro is called dasheen 91 in contrast to the smaller variety of corms called eddo or tanya in the English speaking countries of the West Indies and is cultivated and consumed as a staple crop in the region There are differences among the roots mentioned above taro or dasheen is mostly blue when cooked tanya is white and very dry and eddoes are small and very slimy In the Spanish speaking countries of the Spanish West Indies taro is called name the Portuguese variant of which inhame is used in former Portuguese colonies where taro is still cultivated including the Azores and Brazil In Puerto Rico 93 and Cuba and the Dominican Republic it is sometimes called malanga or yautia In some countries such as Trinidad and Tobago Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and Dominica the leaves and stem of the dasheen or taro are most often cooked and pureed into a thick liquid called callaloo which is served as a side dish similar to creamed spinach Callaloo is sometimes prepared with crab legs coconut milk pumpkin and okra It is usually served alongside rice or made into a soup along with various other roots Ornamental Edit It is also sold as an ornamental aquatic plant It can be grown indoors with high humidity In the UK it has gained the Royal Horticultural Society s Award of Garden Merit 94 A matured variation of taro plant With dark leaves that appear black it s often referred to as Black Magic Laboratory Edit It is also used for anthocyanin study experiments especially with reference to abaxial and adaxial anthocyanic concentration 95 A recent study has revealed honeycomb like microstructures on the taro leaf that make the leaves superhydrophobic The measured contact angle on the leaf in this study is around 148 96 In Melissa K Nelson s article Protecting the Sanctity of Native Foods scientists at the University of Hawaii attempted to patent and genetically alter taro before being dissuaded by activists and farmers In 2006 the University of Hawaii withdrew its patents on the three varieties and agreed to stop genetically modifying Hawaii forms of taro Researchers continue to experiment with modifying a Chinese form of taro however 97 See also EditAquatic plants Domesticated plants and animals of Austronesia List of vegetablesNotes Edit The word dasheen originated in Trinidad and is said to be a corruption of de la Chine or da Chine i e taro de la Chine 91 References Edit T K Lim 3 December 2014 Edible Medicinal and Non Medicinal Plants Volume 9 Modified Stems Roots Bulbs Springer pp 454 460 ISBN 978 94 017 9511 1 Colocasia esculenta L Schott Retrieved 15 February 2015 Umberto Quattrocchi 19 April 2016 CRC World Dictionary of Medicinal and Poisonous Plants Common Names Scientific Names Eponyms Synonyms and Etymology CRC Press pp 1060 1061 ISBN 978 1 4822 5064 0 a b talo taro Colocasia esculenta entry in the Polynesian Lexicon Project Online Pollex Blench Roger 2009 Vernacular Names for Taro in the Indo Pacific Region and Their Possible Implications for Centres of Diversification and Spread PDF a b Saru Patra Tarkari A Classic Odia Dish Using Colocasia Leaves Goya 13 August 2021 Retrieved 12 November 2022 natong Mintz Malcolm W Bikol Dictionary Volume II Bikol English Dictionary Uniprint Perth Western Australia 2004 p 752 ISBN 0 9580383 5 X Colocasia esculenta L Schott Names of Plants in India sites google com Ministry of Education R O C 臺灣閩南語常用詞辭典 vasa 原住民族語言線上詞典 in Chinese Council of Indigenous Peoples Retrieved 1 January 2021 tali 原住民族語言線上詞典 in Chinese Council of Indigenous Peoples Retrieved 1 January 2021 Fey Virginia 2018 Amis Dictionary The Bible Society in Taiwan Retrieved 1 January 2021 Jha Shailee 2021 11 08 अर क चन क सब ज Traditional Mithila Curry Recipe CandidTreat Retrieved 2022 08 28 Madumbi Taste Retrieved 12 November 2022 iteke ama Kinyarwanda Retrieved 12 November 2022 Dastidar Sayantani Ghosh December 2009 Colocasia esculenta An account of its ethnobotany and potentials PDF The University of Texas at Austin Retrieved 25 August 2017 Trinidad Bhagi 13 November 2020 Modulo de Formacao Tecnicos de Extensao Agricola em Africa FAO in Portuguese 2003 Retrieved 2021 04 07 Fernandes Daniel Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses in Portuguese Malanga Spanish to English Translation Spanish Central www spanishcentral com Malanga Definicion de Malanga por Oxford Dictionaries en Lexico com tambien significado de Malanga Lexico Dictionaries Spanish in Spanish Archived from the original on August 20 2021 WHAT IS MALANGA HEALTH BENEFITS NUTRITION amp MORE Abasto 28 September 2020 Retrieved 19 March 2021 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 A Latin Dictionary Oxford Clarendon Press Keimer Ludwig 1984 Die Gartenpflanzen im alten Agypten Vol 2 Hamburg Hoffmann und Campe p 62 Elephant Ears Colocasia Alocasia and Xanthosoma Master Gardener Program Albert F Hill 1939 The Nomenclature of the Taro and its Varieties Botanical Museum Leaflets Harvard University 7 7 113 118 doi 10 5962 p 295132 Colocasia esculenta Germplasm Resources Information Network GRIN Agricultural Research Service ARS United States Department of Agriculture USDA Retrieved 24 April 2015 Kolchaar K 2006 Economic Botany in the Tropics Macmillan India Colocasia esculenta Germplasm Resources Information Network GRIN Agricultural Research Service ARS United States Department of Agriculture USDA Retrieved 19 February 2015 https www visitikaria gr gr CE B9 CE BA CE B1 CF 81 CE AF CE B1 CE B3 CE B1 CF 83 CF 84 CF 81 CE BF CE BD CE BF CE BC CE AF CE B1 Y6itKOzP3Hg Invasive Plants to Watch for in Georgia PDF Georgia Invasive Species Task Force Retrieved 11 August 2015 Colocasia esculenta Texasinvasives org Colocasia esculenta Florida Invasive Plants Colocasia esculenta Archived 2015 06 26 at the Wayback Machine University of Florida Wild Taro Outdoor Alabama Retrieved 15 September 2020 Denham Tim October 2011 Early Agriculture and Plant Domestication in New Guinea and Island Southeast Asia Current Anthropology 52 S4 S379 S395 doi 10 1086 658682 hdl 1885 75070 S2CID 36818517 a b new agri co Country profile Samoa New Agriculturist Online Archived 2008 08 28 at the Wayback Machine accessed June 12 2006 Kreike C M Van Eck H J Lebot V 20 May 2004 Genetic diversity of taro Colocasia esculenta L Schott in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Theoretical and Applied Genetics 109 4 761 768 doi 10 1007 s00122 004 1691 z PMID 15156282 S2CID 21917510 Lebot Vincent 2009 Tropical Root and Tuber Crops Cassava Sweet Potato Yams and Aroids Crop Production Science in Horticulture Vol 17 CABI pp 279 280 ISBN 9781845936211 Chair H Traore R E Duval M F Rivallan R Mukherjee A Aboagye L M Van Rensburg W J Andrianavalona V Pinheiro de Carvalho M A A Saborio F Sri Prana M Komolong B Lawac F Lebot V Chiang Tzen Yuh 17 June 2016 Genetic Diversification and Dispersal of Taro Colocasia esculenta L Schott PLOS ONE 11 6 e0157712 Bibcode 2016PLoSO 1157712C doi 10 1371 journal pone 0157712 PMC 4912093 PMID 27314588 Matthews Peter J Nguyen Van Dzu Tandang Daniel Agoo E Maribel Madulid Domingo A 2015 Taxonomy and ethnobotany of Colocasia esculenta and C formosana Araceae implications for the evolution natural range and domestication of taro Aroideana 38E 1 Matthews P J Agoo E M G Tandang D N Madulid D A 2012 Ethnobotany and Ecology of Wild Taro Colocasia esculenta in the Philippines Implications for Domestication and Dispersal PDF In Spriggs Matthew Addison David Matthews Peter J eds Irrigated Taro Colocasia esculenta in the Indo Pacific Biological Social and Historical Perspectives Senri Ethnological Studies SES Vol 78 National Museum of Ethnology Osaka pp 307 340 ISBN 9784901906937 a b Barker Graeme Lloyd Smith Lindsay Barton Huw Cole Franca Hunt Chris Piper Philip J Rabett Ryan Paz Victor Szabo Katherine 2011 Foraging farming transitions at the Niah Caves Sarawak Borneo Antiquity 85 328 492 509 doi 10 1017 s0003598x00067909 Balbaligo Yvette 15 November 2007 A Brief Note on the 2007 Excavation at Ille Cave Palawan the Philippines Papers from the Institute of Archaeology 18 2007 161 doi 10 5334 pia 308 Fullagar Richard Field Judith Denham Tim Lentfer Carol May 2006 Early and mid Holocene tool use and processing of taro Colocasia esculenta yam Dioscorea sp and other plants at Kuk Swamp in the highlands of Papua New Guinea Journal of Archaeological Science 33 5 595 614 doi 10 1016 j jas 2005 07 020 Denham Tim P Golson J Hughes Philip J 2004 Reading Early Agriculture at Kuk Swamp Wahgi Valley Papua New Guinea the Archaeological Features Phases 1 3 Proceedings of the Prehistoric Society 70 259 297 doi 10 1017 S0079497X00001195 S2CID 128780288 Loy Thomas H Spriggs Matthew Wickler Stephen 1992 Direct evidence for human use of plants 28 000 years ago starch residues on stone artefacts from the northern Solomon Islands Antiquity 66 253 898 912 doi 10 1017 S0003598X00044811 S2CID 162663964 Barker Graeme Hunt Chris Carlos Jane 2011 Transitions to Farming in Island Southeast Asia Archaeological Biomolecular and Palaeoecological Perspectives PDF In Barker Grame Janowski Monica eds Why cultivate Anthropological and Archaeological Approaches to Foraging Farming Transitions in Southeast Asia McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research pp 61 74 ISBN 9781902937588 Matthews Peter J 1995 Aroids and the Austronesians Tropics 4 2 3 105 126 doi 10 3759 tropics 4 105 Barton Huw 2012 The reversed fortunes of sago and rice Oryza sativa in the rainforests of Sarawak Borneo PDF Quaternary International 249 96 104 Bibcode 2012QuInt 249 96B doi 10 1016 j quaint 2011 03 037 Moore Darlene 14 October 2019 Ancient Chamorro Agricultural Practices Guampedia Dixon Boyd Walker Samuel Golabi Mohammad H Manner Harley 2012 Two probably latte period agricultural sites in northern Guam Their plants soils and interpretations PDF Micronesica 42 1 2 209 257 McLean Mervyn 2014 Music Lapita and the Problem of Polynesian Origins Polynesian Origins ISBN 9780473288730 Sanderson Helen 2005 Prance Ghillean Nesbitt Mark eds The Cultural History of Plants Routledge p 70 ISBN 0415927463 FAO Taro cultivation in Asia and the Pacific 1999 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2011 08 07 Retrieved 2018 01 11 Crops faostat fao org Retrieved 6 December 2019 McGee Harold On Food and cooking 2004 Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 80001 1 Weird Foods from around the World Archived from the original on 2008 04 11 Retrieved 2008 04 15 Elephant Ears ASPCA The Morton Arboretum Quarterly Morton Arboretum University of California 1965 p 36 FAO Taro Cultivation in Asia and the Pacific Archived from the original on 24 November 2007 Retrieved 6 June 2016 Rukau A simple delight Cook Islands News 14 January 2021 Retrieved 15 January 2021 Taro leaf blight caused by Phytophthora colocasiae College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources CTAHR University of Hawai i at Manoa Honolulu Hawai i p 2 a b Viotti 2004 a b Hao 2006 Taro in Hawaiian Culture Hawaii Luaus 21 February 2020 Retrieved 12 November 2022 Kameʻeleihiwa Lilikala 2008 Hawaii Center of the Pacific Acton MA Copley Custom Textbooks p 57 Beckwith Martha Warren 31 December 1970 Papa and Wakea Hawaiian Mythology Honolulu University of Hawaii p 94 doi 10 1515 9780824840716 ISBN 978 0 8248 4071 6 OCLC 1253313534 Hawaiian kalo history hbs bishopmuseum org 18 April 2013 Retrieved 2022 10 17 Heard Barbara H 7 November 2011 HALOA Archived from the original on 2012 08 04 Retrieved 2012 02 07 Taro creation story Hawaii SEED 7 November 2011 Archived from the original on 25 April 2012 Retrieved 2012 02 07 Taro Hawaii s Roots earthfoot org Archived from the original on March 3 2012 Robbins Joel 1995 Dispossessing the Spirits Christian Transformations of Desire and Ecology among the Urapmin of Papua New Guinea quick view Ethnology 34 3 212 213 doi 10 2307 3773824 JSTOR 3773824 The Japan Times Online Laing gabi Flickr March 2008 Real Estate Guide Plano Hottest Deals On Market Real Estate Guide Plano Archived from the original on 2011 09 13 How to Make Coconut and Taro Ice Cream A Thai Classic Dessert Pinterest 18 March 2013 Kitchen Archana s Arbi Gosht Masala Recipe Mutton Arbi Curry In Electric Pressure Cooker Archana s Kitchen Kochu You can say that again The Daily Star 2016 07 26 Retrieved 2017 12 16 Ei leh in lam bawk aw mi sual com www misual com Humayunpur A Mini North Eastern Food Hub In Safdarjung NDTV Food The Cross Name Index to Medicinal Plants Four Volume Set By Anthony R Torkelson Page Number 1694 Perfect Patra Timpa Alu Vadi Sanjana Feasts 8 October 2020 Retrieved 12 November 2022 Bengali style kochur loti dish Taro stolon curry FavCounter 2 May 2019 Romero Frias Xavier Eating on the Islands HIMAL Southasian 26 2 69 91 Mithila Cuisine mithilacuisine blogspot com Colcasia قلقاس egyptian cuisine recipes com Retrieved 2018 10 19 Potaje de Berros culturatradicionalgc org Archived from the original on 2014 05 29 Retrieved 2018 10 19 ghanaian cuisine Shields David Spratt Stephen Tanya American Heritage Vegetables University of South Carolina Center for Digital Humanities Retrieved 4 March 2021 a b Robert A Young The Dasheen A Root Crop for the Southern States Circular 127 C U S Department of Agriculture Bureau of Plant Industry 17 May 1913 p 26 The dasheen a tropical root crop for the South by W H Hodge HathiTrust Digital Library Washington D C U S Dept of Agriculture 1954 Retrieved 15 February 2016 Univision Boricuas lanzaran una alcapurria al espacio Puerto Ricans will launch an alcapurria to space Univision Retrieved 2020 12 31 Colocasia esculenta www rhs org Royal Horticultural Society Retrieved 12 April 2020 Hughes Nicole M Carpenter Kaylyn L Keidel Timothy S Miller Charlene N Waters Matthew N Smith William K 2014 Photosynthetic costs and benefits of abaxial versus adaxial anthocyanins in Colocasia esculenta Mojito Planta 240 5 971 981 doi 10 1007 s00425 014 2090 6 PMID 24903360 S2CID 14306228 Kumar Manish Bhardwaj 2020 Wetting characteristics of Colocasia esculenta Taro leaf and a bioinspired surface thereof Scientific Reports 10 1 935 Bibcode 2020NatSR 10 935K doi 10 1038 s41598 020 57410 2 PMC 6976613 PMID 31969578 State of the world 2013 is sustainability still possible Vol 2013 Linda Starke Erik Assadourian Tom Prugh Worldwatch Institute Washington DC 2013 ISBN 978 1 61091 458 1 OCLC 839547649 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Further reading EditHao Sean February 2 2006 Rain pests and disease shrink taro production to record low Honolulu Advertiser p C1 The Future of Kalo Maui No Ka Oi Magazine Vol 11 No 5 August 2006 Powered by Poi Maui No Ka Oi Magazine July 2007 Archived from the original on October 8 2011 Stephens James M May 1994 HS592 MV059 Dasheen Colocasia esculenta L Schott edis ifas ufl edu Florida Cooperative Extension Service Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences University of Florida Retrieved 2022 10 17 Taro climate taro growing methods Green Seeds com 2010 09 27 Archived from the original on 2010 09 27 Taveuni Taro at fijitaro com Fiji taro industry history Viotti V March 16 2004 Honolulu Advertiers Honolulu Advertiser Wagner Warren Lambert Herbst D R Sohmer S H 1999 Manual of the flowering plants of Hawai i Vol 2 Univ of Hawaii Press p 1357 OCLC 833763927 Cho J J John Jayson 2007 Hawaiian kalo past and future Cooperative Extension Service College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources University of Hawaii at Manoa OCLC 299067250 PDF Yap Weston 2012 Kupuna Kalo www kupunakalo com Retrieved 2022 10 17 Kalo cultural significance in Hawaiian history Archived from the original on 2020 02 12 USA Hawaii Restoring the Life of the Land Taro Patches in Hawai i The EcoTipping Points Project ecotippingpoints org Retrieved 2022 10 17 Complete Nutrition Facts for TaroExternal links Edit Wikispecies has information related to Colocasia esculenta Wikimedia Commons has media related to Taro Colocasia esculenta in West African plants A Photo Guide Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taro amp oldid 1131636185, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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