Understand Your Ingredients: Rambutan

Today we explore the unique fruit rambutan, including its mythology and how you can incorporate it into café beverages.

BY EMILY MENESES
SENIOR ONLINE CONTRIBUTOR

Feature image by Joyce Romero via Unsplash

As someone raised by two immigrants from the Philippines, I grew up in a household where ‘unusual’ fruits were a commonplace occurrence. But, I know that there are several ingredients from my childhood that may be foreign to others, which is why I’m sharing my enjoy and fascination for these tastes through our series ”Know Your Ingredients.”

In today’s installment, we’re continuing our exploration of Asian—specifically Southeast Asian—flavors by turning our attention to rambutan. Rambutan is a tropical fruit with origins primarily in Malaysia and Indonesia. This fruit is likewise widely grown in Thailand, Singapore, the Philippines, Sri Lanka, Australia, and Hawaii. Its name comes from the Malaysian rambut, meaning “hair”—a reference to the hair-like spikes on its exterior.

A bunch of ripe rambutans in a metal colander, some still on their twigs. The fruit is about the size of a large strawberry, with pink and yellow spines almost an inch long covering the whole fruit.
Rambutan originates from Southeast Asia. Picture by Beth Macdonald via Unsplash.

The Legend of Rambutan

An ancient Philippine legend tells the story of how rambutan came to be. One day, a man living in the forests by Rabba Mountain came across a deer being attacked by a tiger. Sensation sympathy for the deer, the man used an ax to wound the tiger, thus saving the deer’s life.

After being rescued, the deer transformed, revealing itself to be a perfect fairy named Rodona. Rodona revealed that the tiger trying to take her life was in fact Matesa, an evil witch who wished to have complete control over the forest. Grateful to the man for saving her life, Rodona promised to grant him one wish—and so he wished for a child.

The man and his wife soon had a healthy baby girl and named her Rabona, a combination of the name of Rabba Mountain and the fairy Rodona. One day, the young girl Rabona found a cat in the woods and took it home with her. At the stroke of midnight, the cat transformed into its true identity: Matesa, the witch who had tried to kill the fairy Rodona but was wounded by the man.

A close up of a rambutan tree. The leaves are long, oval, green and glossy, similar to a ficus or rubber tree plant's leaves. The have smooth edges. The fruits are pink and yellow and spiny.
A rambutan tree close up. Picture by Hanif Nurrahman via Unsplash.

As payback for the man wounding her, Matesa placed a curse on the young girl Rabona. The curse caused the girl’s hair to grow thick, long, and cumbersome, getting in the way of her ability to do anything. Months passed, and one day, Rabona—tired of being weighed down by her hair—woke up in the middle of the night to burn down her parents’ hut.

The next morning, the parents woke to the hut burned to the ground—and Rabona was nowhere to be found. In her place, a tree had grown, adorned with peculiar fruits with long, thick, spiny “hair” growing from their skin. When the parents tasted the fruit, it was sweet—and they immediately knew that it was Rabona. To honor their lost daughter, they named the fruit rambutan, and it would ultimately become called one of the sweetest fruits the region had ever produced. 

Rambutan Around the World

Rambutan’s flesh has a texture similar to a grape, with a sweet and mildly tart flavor. It’s popularly used throughout Asia in juices, ice cream, smoothies, and other desserts. Rambutan can also commonly be seen in savory dishes like salad, soup, and curry. Today, rambutan is known globally as a superfruit—rich in fiber, vitamin C, vitamin A, calcium, iron, potassium, magnesium, and more.  

Rambutan in Café Drinks

Rambutan can be incorporated into beverages the way that any other fruit would. Curious to try this fruit for yourself? Try our iced rambutan matcha latte method below!

An photo of a red matcha bowl with a bamboo matcha whisk inside it. There is a glass of iced matcha beside the bowl. Scattered on the table are three small rambutan fruits, still whole.
Rambutan is wonderful in syrups to jazz up drinks like iced matcha. Photo by Emily Meneses.

Iced Rambutan Matcha Latte

Ingredients:

Rambutan syrup:
1 cup cane sugar 

1 cup water 

9-10 rambutan fruits, peeled and roughly chopped

Matcha latte:

1 teaspoon matcha powder 

2 oz. hot water 

8 oz. milk

First, make your rambutan syrup. To do so, whisk the sugar and 1 cup of water together in a small saucepan over medium heat. Boil the combination for 5 minutes. Remove the pan from the heat, then add your chopped rambutan and mash everything together with a potato masher or a fork. Cover the saucepan with a lid and allow everything to steep for 30 minutes.

After 30 minutes, strain the mixture into a bowl or a jar. You can also add some of the crushed fruit to the syrup for texture if you’d like. Now you have your rambutan syrup, which you can add to beverages as you please! You can store the syrup in the refrigerator safely for up to a week.

Next, make your matcha latte by whisking your matcha powder with the 2 ounces of hot water. Add this mixture to your 8 ounces of milk (alternative milk is fine). Add 2 ounces of your homemade rambutan syrup and stir.

Pour the combination over ice, and it’s ready to serve!

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Based in Los Angeles, Emily Meneses (she/her) is a writer and musician passionate about culture and collective care. You can regularly find her at Echo Park Lake, drinking a cortado and journaling about astrology, art, Animal Crossing, and her dreams.

The article Understand Your Ingredients: Rambutan appeared first on Barista Magazine Online.

This article was first published at Barista Magazine, an online magazine dedicated to baristas and coffee professionals.