My Conversion to Liking Breadfruit
When I arrived at an ethnobotanical garden near the town of Captain Cook, on the big island of Hawai’i, to attend an inaugural Breadfruit Festival in late September, I had my doubts about this nutrient-packed fruit that I’d never tried before.
My skepticism was based on my preliminary reporting. Before my visit, I’d talked to one of the world’s leading experts, the Breadfruit Institute’s Director, Diane Ragone PhD., who had told me she hadn’t cared for it when she first tried it. I’d learned from the Breadfruit Institute’s own website about the difficulties faced by Captain Bligh in fulfilling his mission of introducing breadfruit plants to the Caribbean (during the infamous mutiny on the bounty, the mutineers tossed the trees overboard). I’d even found a discussion on the gardening website GardenWeb under lists of the “five WORST tropical fruits,” with one writer pronouncing breadfruit “nauseous.”