Loroco is native to Central America, and was
called Quilite, which in the indigenous language means “Edible herb”. It
is a perennial plant that produces flowers from May to October in El
Salvador, but with irrigation can produce year-round. The Loroco plant
is a tropical flowering woody vine with ornamental flowers. It grows
wild in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, and prefers a
temperature range between 68 and 90 F.
The flowers are harvested and used in the cuisine of El Salvador and
some other countries in Central America. It has a unique, pungent flavor
that is used in 'pupusas', a corn-based food popular in El Loroco. Loroco tastes "green" with overtones of nuts. The closest taste perhaps
to compare the "green" part to is chard, or a cross between mild
broccoli and squash
Loroco is propagated principally by seed, but can also be propagated by
cuttings. It takes about three to four months from seed to flowering.
The leaves can be 1 1/2 to 8 1/2 inches (4 to 22 cm) long and 1 1/2 to 5
inches (1 1/2 to 12 cm) wide. The vine produces flowers in clusters of
10 to 32, averaging 25 per cluster, that in turn, if unharvested,
produce pods up to 13 inches (34 cm) long. Seeds are very hard to find. Scarce Seeds available here.
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1 comment:
I think... nice taste coz I like broccoli and squash as well ;-) Yummy snack!
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