A Year-Round Guide to Franklin and Nantahala

It hangs on a tree like an apple. It grows in a cluster like a grape. It ripens in late summer like a peach. It tastes like a banana and

Rosemary and Goat Cheese Strata

It hangs on a tree like an apple. It grows in a cluster like a grape. It ripens in late summer like a peach. It tastes like a banana and

The Pawpaw Predicament

Pawpaws

It hangs on a tree like an apple. It grows in a cluster like a grape. It ripens in late summer like a peach. It tastes like a banana and a mango mixed together.

The pawpaw is complicated.

It doesn’t know exactly what it is, so no wonder few people understand it.

Derek Morris, a horticulture technician for the Forsyth County Cooperative Extension Service, knows the pawpaw well.

He grows about 30 varieties of the fruit in his backyard in Winston-Salem. Every summer, throughout August and into September, he harvests the ripe pawpaws, which are about the size of small baking potatoes, and carries them into his kitchen. He peels off the thin skin of the fruit and places the soft, pudding-like middle into a bowl. He mashes the pulp with a fork and removes the lima-bean-size seeds. Like a banana or a persimmon, the pawpaw pulp makes delicious breads and pies and cookies.

Morris isn’t an innovator.

In the early 1900s, many people knew the pawpaw well. The pawpaw is native in every North Carolina county, and from northern Florida to southern Ontario. The short, stubby trees once grew along many streams, creeks, and rivers. But as people cleared the land, they destroyed the taller trees that provided vital shade for pawpaw saplings. They tried to make up for the missing fruit by importing bananas and mangoes. But there is no substitute.

A pawpaw may hang like, grow like, ripen like, and taste like a lot of things. But it isn’t. A pawpaw is the largest edible fruit native to North America. It is the only food source in this area for the zebra swallowtail butterfly. It is one of a few fruits that require no pesticides. It is the closest thing to a tropical fruit that grows here.

The pawpaw can’t be understood by comparing it to something else. It is, simply, a pawpaw.

Pawpaw Festival

Derek MorrisThe best way to understand a pawpaw is to taste it. Join Derek Morris (above) and other pawpaw enthusiasts at the North Carolina Pawpaw Festival on August 29 in Lewisville to make sense of the fruit for yourself. The festival takes place at Jack Warren Park, 450 Lewisville-Clemmons Road, from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Visit ncpawpaw.com for more information.

This story was published on Jul 31, 2012

Leah Hughes King

Hughes writes from her family farm in Jackson Creek, a rural community in Randolph County. She has a degree in journalism and mass communication and a minor in folklore from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Hughes’s work has appeared in Our State, the News & Record, Business North Carolina, Winston-Salem Monthly, Lake Norman Magazine, Epicurean Charlotte, Carolina Country and other local publications.