Name: Eleanor Chang
Class Year: 1978
Country of Residence: United States
Why is this recipe great? What’s its backstory?
In Hong Kong where I grew up, Hachiya persimmons are almost always eaten raw. There is nothing like the superb delicate taste of a sweet persimmon. Often, we have to wait weeks for them to perfectly ripen to almost mushy for eating as the unripe fruit would make your mouth pucker. To help hasten the ripening process, the persimmons would be stored in the container along with the rice. Around Lunar New Year, persimmons are particularly popular as they are considered auspicious for the new year and dried persimmons are offered to guests or as gifts.
After coming to in the U.S., persimmons did not appear on my radar until I moved to San Francisco. The local Chinatown grocery markets not only carry the Hachiya persimmons, they also have the Fuyu variety which I had not come across before. It was then that I found out that persimmon trees grow in America, but most of the time, the fruits are left hanging on the trees to look like ornaments for the holidays.
I bought the “Beard on Bread” cookbook to learn how to bake and found that it included a recipe for persimmon bread. The ingredients made it sound like it is for a fruitcake until I baked it for the first time. That was the start of a very beautiful relationship! For the last 20 years, I would start baking persimmon bread around Thanksgiving to serve at parties and to give as holiday gifts to friends and family. Everyone seems to want more of this “fruitcake.”