Otago Daily Times

Worth the wait

Not all fruit and vege are best eaten as soon as they are picked, writes James Wong.

-

ONE of the mantras of popular food culture today is ‘‘eating seasonally’’, a practice universall­y held to be the key to better flavour, better nutrition, better ethics, better everything. However, as a scientist who is fascinated by how what goes on inside the cells of plants dictates the flavour and nutritiona­l benefits of harvests, I have just one problem with this: it’s simply untrue.

For while the sweetness of crops such as asparagus and sweetcorn can indeed decline precipitou­sly in the days (even hours) after harvest, for many crops the exact opposite occurs. This is particular­ly true of the winter squash, which despite being ready to harvest right now, will measurably increase in flavour and nutrition if you hold off eating it for a few months. For squashes, fresher is definitely not better. Here’s how it works ...

Even when severed from the parent plant, winter squash are still alive and will undergo biological changes responding to the environmen­t around them. Enzymes in their tissues are slowly released that break down the stores of starch they contain, turning them into simple sugars. These sugars are responsibl­e for the sweet flavour of roast pumpkin and butternuts­quash soup, and also trigger a cascade of knockon chemical reactions, such as the production of carotenes.

These orange antioxidan­t pigments give the fruit their characteri­stic colour and, when converted into vitamin A in the body, supply nutritiona­l benefits, too. Finally, these carotenes are broken down to create the flavour compounds that provide squash with their rich, nutty, caramel notes. Ever wondered why pumpkins, sweet potatoes and carrots have a bit of a flavour crossover? That’s partly because of these orangecolo­ured phytonutri­ents. This chain of chemical reactions makes the crop sweeter, better coloured, richer in flavour and also higher in phytonutri­ents and key vitamins, and all it takes is a bit of patience.

There is just one small catch: knowing how long to leave them depends on the variety of squash you are growing, as ‘‘winter squash’’ is just a catchall category for three totally distinct species. For almost, all true winter squash (developed from the species Cucurbita maxima), store your fruit in a cool, dark, wellventil­ated place at between 1015degC for at least a month. However, for jacko’lanterntyp­e pumpkins and acorn squash (C. pepo),

which are technicall­y marrows and generally pretty watery and lower in flavour compounds, the process takes as little as two weeks under the same conditions. Finally, if you are growing the butternut squash, C. moschata,

this can take as long as three months to reach its peak.

In short, to get squash that is better in pretty much every way, there is only one thing you have to do: stop thinking about it as an autumn vegetable (just because you harvest it in autumn) and call it a winter vegetable, as that’s the best time to eat them. They are all winter squash, after all. — Guardian News and Media

❛ There is just one small catch: knowing how long to leave them

 ?? PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES ?? Autumn vegetables, such as pumpkin and butternut, taste better if left for a couple of weeks after picking.
PHOTOS: GETTY IMAGES Autumn vegetables, such as pumpkin and butternut, taste better if left for a couple of weeks after picking.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand