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Green Tamarind Pod

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Green Tamarind Pod

When green, the hard green/white pulp of young tamarind fruit is often used as a component of savory dishes, in a broth, as a pickling agent. It's commonly used to make a Filipino soup called sinigang.

Sour when green, sweet with a hint of sour when ripe. When Tamarind is ripe, the brittle shell cracks open easily to reveal seeds covered in a sticky, sweet/sour paste that's high in vitamin B and calcium. Some people crack the fresh pods and suck the paste off the seeds, like Li Hing Mui.

Grown in Hawaiʻi
When green, the hard green/white pulp of young tamarind fruit is often used as a component of savory dishes, in a broth, as a pickling agent. It's commonly used to make a Filipino soup called sinigang.

Sour when green, sweet with a hint of sour when ripe. When Tamarind is ripe, the brittle shell cracks open easily to reveal seeds covered in a sticky, sweet/sour paste that's high in vitamin B and calcium. Some people crack the fresh pods and suck the paste off the seeds, like Li Hing Mui.

Grown in Hawaiʻi
$2.40

Original: $7.99

-70%
Green Tamarind Pod

$7.99

$2.40

Description

When green, the hard green/white pulp of young tamarind fruit is often used as a component of savory dishes, in a broth, as a pickling agent. It's commonly used to make a Filipino soup called sinigang.

Sour when green, sweet with a hint of sour when ripe. When Tamarind is ripe, the brittle shell cracks open easily to reveal seeds covered in a sticky, sweet/sour paste that's high in vitamin B and calcium. Some people crack the fresh pods and suck the paste off the seeds, like Li Hing Mui.

Grown in Hawaiʻi