Freelance Writing Jobs | Today's Articles | Sign In

 
Browse Sections

Durian Fruit: The King of Fruit

Delicious but stinky Durian fruit is Asia's King of Fruit

Sep 22, 2006 June Chua

Durian Fruit can best be described as having a succulent, creamy filling but smelling like stinky socks - don't let that dissuade you from trying it.

TRUE STORY ABOUT DURIAN FRUIT

My friend Val once told me a story involving the very odiferous durian fruit - known in Asia as "the King of Fruit" but durian fruit is banned in public places such as subways, malls and hotels.

She and her family were visiting Malaysia a few years ago but had a stop over in Singapore. Her parents, who had moved to Canada about 30 years earlier, were chomping at the bit for durian. This was NOT permitted in the hotel but they went out and got one anyway from a local market.

"They brought it back and it was like they were little kids again. Giggling and all a-twitter about the durian. They opened it up in the hotel room and started to eat. I think only a few minutes had passed and we got a phone call."

The hotel staff demanded to know if they had durian in the room. Her mother lied. The official replied: "Madam, we have had reports of a durian smell in your vicinity, please tell us if you have durian." Mom did not relent.

Her parents opened all the windows and were furiously fanning the room with the hotel magazine when they heard a knock on the door. A man dressed like an astronaut was standing on the other side.

"We have located the durian smell to this room, please step aside."

Two men, wearing the ridiculous suit and bearing a spray can charged in and spent the next five minutes atomizing the hotel room. Val's parents stood in the corner looking very much like the naughty children that they had been.

"It is of such an excellent taste that it surpasses in flavour all the other fruits of the world." (quote from a British traveller about durian in 1599)

HOW TO EAT DURIAN FRUIT

Durian, looking much like a large spiky tribble (spot the Star Trek reference!), comes in nine edible varieties and is native to southeast Asia. It's sold in markets all over the Asian world and now, even in North America. By the time it's arrived on our shores, its smell is barely perceptible.

People have different ways of picking durian fruit, to see if it's ready to eat. My parents like to smell the bottom of the stem. If it emits a strong smell, then it's ready to consume. Some people prefer the tapping method. Hitting the fruit with a stick and hearing the appropriate slightly-hollow "thunk" sound. Of course, this is something you'd have to learn from a durian jedi.

Durian's brownish-green exterior belies a silky, custard-like flesh clinging to the giant seeds inside. My parents usually lay out newspaper on their kitchen floor in order to cut the fruit in half using a cleaver. It will reveal four seeds covered in pale yellow flesh. You dig out a giant seed and proceed to suck the creamy flesh. Beware, it's very filling. Durian, if you can stand the smell, has a delectable, sweet flavour. For me, it's akin to vanilla pudding.

I have an ethnic bond to durian. According to the experts, the locus of durian diversity is on the island of Borneo where I was born. Those on Borneo have a passion for durian fruit that is also shared by the orangutans of the island.

While durian fruit is not native to Thailand, the country has become the largest exporter of the fruit. It was introduced to Thailand during the 18th century.

Other durian-growing regions include Vietnam, Myanmar, India, Sri Lanka, Florida, Hawaii, Madagascar and Mindanao in the Philippines. By the way, the Kadayawan festival in Davao City, Mindanao has an annual celebration featuring durian. I have also heard of similar festivals in Thailand.

Remember when purchasing durian to look for the "24" category. It's got the deepest flavours.

DURIAN DISHES

  • In Malaysia, durian fruit is used to flavour candy, cakes, mousse, chips, ice cream and milkshakes. There's a dish, pulut durian, of glutinous rice steamed with coconut milk and served with ripe durian (I think this is also available in Thailand). Sugared and salted preserves are also created from durian.
  • Sambal Tempoyak is a dish from Sumatra composed of fermented durian, coconut milk and the ultra-spicy sambal sauce.
  • Sometimes the seeds are roasted, boiled or fried and have a consistency that's reminiscent of yams. In Java, seeds are thinly sliced and cooked with sugar to eat as candy.
  • In parts of Indonesia, the young leaves of durian are sometimes cooked as vegetables and the petals of durian flowers are also eaten.

DURIAN TOURISM

The Boa Sheng Durian Farm on the island of Penang in Malaysia offers a full tourist experience of the King of Fruit. The farm has different species of the fruit and you are shown around the farm and given a tasting. Apparently several of its fruit have won top prizes.

And, if you're in Singapore, you should stop by the Four Seasons Dessert Shop (in the China Square Food Centre), which is a durian smorgasboard. Everything is made from durian: from cakes to puddings to crepes.

The copyright of the article Durian Fruit: The King of Fruit in Asian Cuisine is owned by June Chua. Permission to republish Durian Fruit: The King of Fruit in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
durianfruit, Anon durianfruit
   
What do you think about this article?

NOTE: Because you are not a Suite101 member, your comment will be moderated before it is viewable.
post your comment
What is 4+5?
31 Comments

Comments

May 14, 2008 8:31 PM
Guest :
The durian is heaven sent and should be worshipped as such!

Nina Redza
www.ninaredza.com
Sep 12, 2008 11:23 AM
Guest :
This is the worst fruit I have ever smelled. A fellow co-worker brought it in to the office and it was sealed in pastic bags and the smell reeked out of the bags!!!How anyone can eat it is a huge mystery to me! It smells like dead rat, thrown into a garbage truck and left there to rot in 100 degree weather!
Keep your Durian in Asia!
Sep 21, 2008 7:15 PM
Guest :
Saw these for the first time today in Chinatown N.Y. Did not taste it. Maybe next time
Sep 28, 2008 3:46 PM
Guest :
HAve to admit, this fruit has a very strong smell of rotten food garbage after three days in the trash can by the door of a Spanish Mediterranean Villa. However, that did not detherred me from finding out its true value! As a traveler of the world and wise analytical mind of the deceptive means of Nature, I realiced that it had to have some some virtue after all.
It tastes great! I had the waffle flavour kind. I love it. If yuo can pass the sniff test!
Oct 1, 2008 6:54 AM
Guest :
I grew up in Mindanao, South of Davao our village was surrounded with durian trees and many other tropical fruits. As a child i had the previllege to eat durian as much as i can take its creamy taste with rich flavor just melt in your mouth. I am now in my late 30's and still love my durian I always planned my holiday around march and april,during durian season.
Oct 2, 2008 8:52 AM
Guest :
does anybody know where i can purchase this fruit from an on-line resource
sgephart@hotmail.com
Oct 21, 2008 8:09 PM
Guest :
great site!!! very interesting!!! i learned a lot and that story was hilarious!!!
Nov 10, 2008 8:26 PM
Guest :
I just tried durian recently and loved it! My husband wouldn't go near it and I can't blame him although he really is missing out. When the dog came in the house she was sniffing around for something nasty to roll in :)
Nov 14, 2008 6:51 PM
Guest :
We have this delicious fruit in the bay area. First tried it in Kansas when I lived there.
Americans need to open their mind a little bit when trying exotic fruits before they say terrible things about it. The flavor is an acquired taste.
Some describe it comically as "Sweet Diesel."
It's perfect surfing food!
Mahalo
Nov 19, 2008 10:08 PM
Guest :
I just had my first taste today! It's bloody awesome!! Highly recommended. This one was fresh :D
Nov 23, 2008 5:26 PM
Guest :
I tried durian for the first time last night at an open air market in Duri, Sumatra. The smell wasn't anywhere near as bad as I had been lead to believe. It was a strange combination of flavours sort of a creamy Papaya/Banana/Butterscotch but also something else hard to define. I recommend trying it if you ever get the chance.
Nov 24, 2008 5:57 PM
Guest :
I love durian!

One time, I was able to eat three varieties in one day, hahahaha

Man, was I intoxicated!
Nov 25, 2008 6:49 AM
Guest :
I tried Durian last night, I bought it already open and in a container. "By the time it's arrived on our shores, its smell is barely perceptible." Not true, I could not breathe, I rubbed Vicks Vapor rub all over and around my nose, and I could still smell the fruit. I held my nose and tried to eat it, I could not even swallow it. It tasted to me just like it smelled. It smells like Crap, rotting fish, and a heavily used jock strap. Maybe if it is fresh it would taste better and maybe if it was not frozen before I ate it, but it still taste and smell absolutely HORRIBLE. Be careful of Durian, if you like, more power to you, but I just can't do it.
Dec 3, 2008 2:16 AM
Guest :
It is said that Westerners rarely enjoy the durian, being unable to get past the smell. I have been eating them for over 20 years. I loved the smell and loved the taste on first meeting. There are many durian fascists in this world who seem to take the smell as a personal insult. I'm afraid they are the ones who are missing out. What can I suggest? Leave durians for those who enjoy them and consider controlling your insulting behaviour towards those people who love The King of Fruit. Is such behaviour rational or necessary?
David L Parker
Dec 8, 2008 4:48 PM
Guest :
I LOVE DURIAN.... first time i try it... oohh bhooy.... my wife had a good time on me... and she want me to eat more every night be fore going to bed... you know why.. i wont tell you but you have to try its so goooooood.i love it ilove it i love it...
Jan 9, 2009 6:34 PM
Guest :
I tried Durian for the first time today. I can't say that I liked it but I also can't say that I hated it either. It has a very foul smell and tasted just like it smelled only sweet. I tried two bites of it and I continued to taste it all day long.
I may try it again or at least I hope someone bets me $500 dollars to try it somewhere, I could easily do that again.
Jan 15, 2009 6:18 PM
Guest :
I've heard that frozen durian... sucks. So if it didn't taste good to you, you probably had frozen durian.


Nya... I really want to try this...
Feb 4, 2009 11:13 AM
Guest :
Well i have to say that my boyfriend and i were in the store and he had seen this werid thing i thought it looked cool so i bought it to see what was inside and how to eat it.
we took it home and cut it open and the smell was bad at frist but as we were figuring it out what to eat the smell got more and more overwhelming. we tasted everything thing inside this king of fruit but i must say i dont think i will try this again. it smelled almost like rottin onoin. but i do have to say that it was an interesting experince.
Feb 10, 2009 4:25 PM
Guest :
If you could NOT stand the taste, then you would hate Durian; but if you could stand the taste, you just got to love it. Different strokes for different folks. One man's trash is another man's gold! Remember, people, not to impose your ideas on others!

Sometimes I don't like the smell of Durian but I eat it. I am Asian, that could explain why I could stand the smell of Durian. Have you guys seen a show on Discover channel where a Caucasian male who could eat almost anything (bull's eye, scorpion, etc) that many would consider disgusting? That same guy could not stand the taste and smell of Durian. Yet, Durian is just a fruit, this is to show that you have to overcome your mental mind in order to enjoy Durian.

It is all in the mind, people!
Feb 13, 2009 10:22 PM
Guest :
I am currently located in asia and being a foreigner, vender often try to sell you the unripped, bad or tasteless durians. There're few types of durian. I discover there are the wet type and the dry type during in HK. The dry type is lighter in weight, hollow in meat, sweet, very dry moose like texture and less pungent. I only had it once by luck. The dry durian was reddish in colour, really big but light in weight at the same time. The wet ones are very common and is heavier in weight. The meat is often wet, heavy and also wet pasty in texture leaving a smell of caramel butter in the inner chamber of the nostrals chamber. The area where the meat meets the seeds, I can litterally be discribed as the best smooth cream butter. The bad ones are dry, griddy and has a jackfruit texture that feel like rubber. To select a perfect durian is not to get the biggest or the roundest, however, there are exceptions. The perfect durian are often lope sided, smells good and hollow on the thump as the writer descibed above. The lopped side durian are often the best because of the balance meat. When selecting a ripped durian I tend to select the ones with some colouration.

I have heard that the best durian are from Malaysia as they're the priciest. Thailand's durian are larger and very tasty but it does not reach the status of AAA (triple A) and XO (cognac) flavoured. I bought this XO for triple the price and I can say it is worth every penny.
Feb 17, 2009 6:24 PM
Guest :
i've searched all oer the market for one but can't seem to find one in the state of Texas
Feb 23, 2009 6:40 AM
Guest :
LOL I LOVE READING THE COMMENTS ABOUT DURIAN I HAVE SOME DURIAN CANDY FROM THE PHILIPPINES IT IS VERY GOOD! HARD TO FIND EVEN IN THE PHILIPPINES IT REMINDS ME OF TAFFY.

Mar 4, 2009 9:29 AM
Guest :
OH MY GOD!!!!! This fruit is a nightmare How do you get past the smell???Several of my friends tried to eat it but immediately spit it out. We couldn't decide which was worse, the smell or how it looked.
Mar 9, 2009 5:03 PM
Guest :
My daughter and I saw this spiky fruit in the store and decided that we'd give it a try. As soonas we got home we went onthe net to see what to do with it. We found this site. It is great. Unfortunatly we had already cut it in half, so as we were reading, our kitchen was getting smellier and smellier. But, the curiosity kept our interest and we took a taste. Since it is still partially frozen, we found the flavour mild. ( I am assuming that part of the reason they come frozen is to keep the smell at bay.) I am sure we will try again but armed with some recipes to incorporate it into. Now we just have to wait for the rest of the family to get home. HA ha ha.
PS. For those of you with a closed mind, you should try something at least once before your judgement.
Mar 23, 2009 9:56 PM
Guest :
I Love Durian, I grew up with it in Mindanao. Im lucky that I can buy it here in California even it is frozen it is still taste good. I let my boyfriend taste it he is a caucasian. I told him to pinch his nose when tasting the durian so that he will not smell it ( it does smell like a rotten onion) and just taste the creamy fruit.
Mar 24, 2009 7:09 AM
Guest :
D.I.Y. Durian

-Get yo mama's old socks wear them and run a marathon
-squeeze the sweat out of them into a bowl
-repeat twice
-chop a dead rat into pieces and mix with sweat into bowl
-do a poo in the bowl (make sure you have laxatives before)
-regurgitate 2 dinners into bowl


-mix together and eat... YUM YUM!!! THIS IS DURIAN!!!!
Mar 31, 2009 6:34 PM
Guest :
Hey, this is a wonder site for the Durian, I came across this tonight because, I wanted to show my husband the thorny fruit shell for I have a frozen one right now in the kitchen (thawing).

I grew up in the Philippines, in Butuan City,Mindanao where I first tasted it. I was in grade school when our Parents begged us( ten kids) to taste but we couldn't bare the smell even though we saw them eating/licking it good. Then finally after so many "begs", we finally tried,and boy! oh Boy!it taste good and we asked for more.Now the problem, how our parents have to accomodate their 10 kids for one fruit! So they have to buy more. hahaha

Durian candies are good,too.

So when I came across a Thai Restaurant here in Oxnard,CA with a Durian Shake I ordered one and tasted great! mmmmmm so delicious!

And last week I came across a frozen Durian in a Filipino store( Seafood City ( Northills( Northdrige, CA)I grabbed a bag. Ready to eat soon for dessert after our Chicken Adobo dinner tonight. I hope my husband will like it, too.
Apr 2, 2009 3:25 PM
Guest :
Has an onion-like aftertaste. I opened my mind, then my mouth. Only barely able to stifle the gag reflex. Came home and started hitting the GasEx after that first burp; oh Sweet Jesus!
May 11, 2009 6:23 PM
Guest :
what a replusive fruit what am i talking about!
THE KING OF FRUIT!
May 15, 2009 3:12 PM
Guest :
A Vietnamese girl in our office brought in some frozen Durian. I've heard a lot about it and thought I would give it a try. The smell was absolutely horrendous, but I'd heard some people say the taste is divine, so I took a spoonful. I immediately spit it back out. It tastes nearly as horrible as it smells, like the soupy liquid at the bottom of a garbage can might taste...rotten with a hint of sweet. Maybe the fresh stuff is better, but I'd have to be double-dog-dared to touch it again.
May 20, 2009 11:35 AM
Guest :
if u eat the frozen one it'll suck for sure i hate it .
but if u eat the real one dam it hella good
31 Comments

Related Topics

Reference


;