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liuzhou

liuzhou

This morning, in a local supermarket, I found this pile of dirty little ball-shaped things.

 

1603907188_mati.thumb.jpg.356d2aecd8dacf83b9650d39c4bc8967.jpg

 

Eleocharis dulcis

 

In Chinese, 马蹄/馬蹄 (Mand: mǎ tí; Cant: maa5 tai4), literally 'horse hoof' or 荸荠/荸薺 ( (Mand: bí qí; Cant: but6 cai4).

 

Chinese water chestnuts.

 

Cleaned up, they look like this.

 

1671643449_mati3.thumb.jpg.00729bb0aed8f7e34050596edf2eb7ed.jpg

 

Despite their their nutty name, they are not nuts, but a root vegetable. More technically a corm.

 

They are eaten in many ways. They can be ground to make a type of flour used in sweet dim sum cakes. They can be candied. They are used in hot pots and stews.

 

They are not something I buy a lot and when I do I buy them from the farmers' market, where a couple of women sit peeling them all day long. They do it 100 times faster than I ever could.

2137676350_mati2.thumb.jpg.967cfe767a3b532f91cb8e926440327f.jpg

 

They have the benefit of staying slightly sweet and crisp even after cooking or canning. I don't recall seeing them canned here - only fresh.

 

 

 

liuzhou

liuzhou

This morning, in a local supermarket, I found this pile of dirty little ball-shaped things.

 

1603907188_mati.thumb.jpg.356d2aecd8dacf83b9650d39c4bc8967.jpg

 

Eleocharis dulcis

 

In Chinese, 马蹄/ (Mand: mǎ tí; Cant: maa5 tai4), literally 'horse hoof' or 荸荠/ ( (Mand: bí qí; Cant: but6 cai4).

 

Chinese water chestnuts.

 

Cleaned up, they look like this.

 

1671643449_mati3.thumb.jpg.00729bb0aed8f7e34050596edf2eb7ed.jpg

 

Despite their their nutty name, they are not nuts, but a root vegetable. More technically a corm.

 

They are eaten in many ways. They can be ground to make a type of flour used in sweet dim sum cakes. They can be candied. They are used in hot pots and stews.

 

They are not something I buy a lot and when I do I buy them from the farmers' market, where a couple of women sit peeling them all day long. They do it 100 times faster than I ever could.

2137676350_mati2.thumb.jpg.967cfe767a3b532f91cb8e926440327f.jpg

 

They have the benefit of staying slightly sweet and crisp even after cooking or canning. I don't recall seeing them canned here - only fresh.

 

 

 

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