Forest Preserve District of Cook County (Illinois)
Nature Bulletin No. 631-A March 5, 1977
Forest Preserve District of Cook County
George W. Dunne, President
Roland F. Eisenbeis, Supt. of Conservation
****:PINEAPPLES
It would be appropriate if the official seal of our 50th state included a
picture of a pineapple. Hawaii is as famous for its pineapples as for its
hospitality and for centuries that fruit has been a symbol of hospitality.
In Virginia and neighboring states you may frequently see carved
pineapples on the gateposts and over the doorways of old Colonial
homes.
In 1493, on his second voyage to the West Indies, Columbus discovered
the Guadeloupe Islands and found the Carib natives cultivating a
luscious fruit which the Spaniards named pina because of its
resemblance to a giant-size pine cone. The Caribs would place some of
it at the entrances to their villages and huts to indicate friendship and
hospitality. This custom was adopted to some extent in Spain and later
in England from where -- like the potato and the turkey -- it was brought
back to America.
Apparently in Central or perhaps in South America, originally, the
pineapple was cultivated and developed from a wild ancestor with a
hard inedible fruit. From the pineapples represented in their pottery we
know that, later, the pre-Incans cultivated this fruit, probably in the
warm valleys and lowlands of Peru. The Incans developed a new
variety, with a small, almost black fruit, that is still grown there and has
a unique flavor.
No one knows when the pineapple was introduced into islands of the
West Indies but the finest varieties have been developed there,
including the popular Red Spanish, the Puerto Rican Big Head that
sometimes weighs 30 pounds, and the Smooth Cayenne -- the kind most
widely cultivated in Hawaii.
The pineapple is a queer plant and it has queer relatives, all with the
same peculiar kind of flowers and all restricted to tropical or sub-
tropical regions in this hemisphere. Most of them are air plants --
epiphytes, not parasites -- such as the so-called Spanish Moss that
festoons the trees in our coastal plains from Virginia to Texas.
The pineapple plant has a rosette of long swordlike leaves, stiff and
fibrous, on a thick upright stem. It reminds you of a cactus and, like a
cactus, those leaves have specialized tissues for storing water. It can be
kept out of the ground for months and yet grow when set in moist soil.
That is why, even though cultivated varieties rarely produce seed, it
could be taken to Africa and Asia by early navigators and missionaries.
It can survive long periods without rain and, in Hawaii, thrives on the
rich but semiarid volcanic soils more than 2000 feet above sea level.
The flower stalk bears a mass of lavender flowers. Originally separate,
they consolidate and form the pineapple fruit which is really an
aggregation of several hundred fruits -- each with its own core and
spiny bracts -- at the spots where the flowers were. It is relatively low in
vitamin A but high in sugars, especially when fully ripe. In addition to
acid and volatile oil flavorings it contains small amounts of a sulfur
compound found in no other fruit and chiefly responsible for its
distinctive flavor.
Unfortunately, when ripe, the finest varieties cannot withstand long
shipments. In Hawaii, which produces 75 percent of the world's crop,
they are canned or converted into juice. Our fresh pineapples, mostly
from Puerto Rico and Cuba, are gathered before they ripen. A "ruddy-
ripe" pineapple is far more delicious and can be eaten with a spoon.
A remarkable fact about this "symbol of hospitality" is that, when
decayed, it is extremely poisonous.
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