Jump to content

Tokelauan cuisine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
Tokelauan cuisine
Coconut, an important staple of Tokelau
Country or regionTokelau
National dishesOta
National drinkKava, Coconut water

Tokelauan cuisine (Meakai tokelau) is the culinary traditions and practices of the island nation of Tokelau.

Ingredients

Bird's nest fern (Laumea), an important leafy vegetable in Tokelau.

The original food crops of the Tokelauans were coconut (niu), pandanus (fala), noni (nonu), dyer's fig (mati) and arrowroot (māhoā)[1] Of these, coconut and pandanus fruit were considered the major food crops while noni, dyer's fig and arrowroot were considered famine food, eaten only during times of scarcity. Coconut in particular was a very important component of the diet, making up the majority of the Tokelauans energy intake.[2][3] The coconut drupe was prepared and consumed in various forms, the meat, milk and oil are all used extensively in many meal preparations. Sap from the cut flower spathe was also collected and is consumed as a beverage or boiled down into a red syrup (kaleve kukula) that was used as a sweetener for various dishes.

Foods and dishes

  • Lolo fala; a pudding made from pandanus fruit pulp and coconut cream, sometimes thickened with starch.[4]
  • Ota; a raw fish dish.
  • 'otai; a drink made from grated coconut meat, milk and water mixed together.
  • Puleleti; a confection made from desiccated coconut and coconut syrup rolled into balls.
  • Puta; a round doughnut.
  • Tatuna; coconut cream residue separated during the process of making coconut oil, usually formed into balls and eaten with pandanus fruit.[5][6]
  • Tupelepele; a gelatinous food made from grated coconut meat and coconut water, thickened with starch.
  • Vaihalo; a porridge made from coconut.
  • Whistler, W. Arthur (April 1988). "Ethnobotany of Tokelau: The Plants, Their Tokelau Names, and Their Uses" (PDF). New York Botanical Garden. Retrieved 11 August 2023.

References

  1. ^ "Variety and Preparation of Foods – Ethnology of Tokelau Islands". NZETC - New Zealand Electronic Text Collection. Retrieved 2023-08-03.
  2. ^ Derek F. Roberts, Kanji Torizuka (1992). Isolation, Migration and Health. Cambridge University Press. p. 178. ISBN 9780521419123.
  3. ^ F. Wessen, Albert (1992). Migration and Health in a Small Society: The Case of Tokelau. Clarendon Press. p. 298. ISBN 9780198542629.
  4. ^ Haden, Roger (2009). Food Culture in the Pacific Islands. Bloomsbury Publishing USA. p. 68. ISBN 9780313344930.
  5. ^ B. Kernot, Sidney M. Mead (1983). Art and Artists of Oceania. Dunmore Press. p. 275. ISBN 9780961100605.
  6. ^ "Slicing pandanus (fala) keys to flavour tatuna (balls of cooked coconut cream)". DigitalNZ – Ā-Tihi o Aotearoa. Retrieved 2023-08-11.