Pomegranate

Punica granatum; the dwarf ornamental is var. nana, and the wild Socotran relative is the separate species Punica protopunica

Origin: The temperate belt that runs from the Iranian plateau and the South Caucasus eastward through the mountains of Central Asia to the western Himalaya of northern India, where the wild pomegranate still grows on dry, stony hillsides

The pomegranate is one of the oldest of all the cultivated fruits, taken into the orchard at the very dawn of horticulture alongside the grape, the fig, the olive, and the date. It is a single species, Punica granatum, and unlike the plum or the cherry it was not domesticated twice at opposite ends of the world; its homeland is the dry, mountainous belt that runs from the Iranian plateau and Transcaucasia through Central Asia to the foothills of the western Himalaya, and from that one cradle every cultivated pomegranate descends. The fruit is a botanical curiosity, neither a true berry of the common kind nor a stone fruit, but a balausta: a leathery-skinned globe, crowned with the persistent calyx that gave the medieval crown its shape, and packed within with hundreds of seeds, each sheathed in a translucent jewel of juice-laden flesh called the aril. It is the aril, not the bitter pith or the papery membranes that divide the chambers, that is eaten, and the great labour of the pomegranate has always been the freeing of those jewelled seeds from the fruit that holds them. Like the almond, the pomegranate is one species with a decisive internal division, though here the division is not of poison and safety but of sweetness and sourness. The cultivated pomegranate falls into two broad families, and both are used substantially in the kitchen to this day. The sweet dessert pomegranates, low in acid and high in sugar, are the fruit of the hand and the juice press, eaten fresh and pressed for their ruby juice; the legendary sweet anar of Kandahar and the modern Wonderful variety belong here. The sour or sour-sweet pomegranates, sharp with acid, are the fruit of the pot: too tart to enjoy raw, they are pressed and their juice boiled down to the thick, dark, intensely tangy syrup that the Levant calls dibs rumman, Turkey nar ekşisi, and the Caucasus narsharab, the pomegranate molasses that is one of the great souring agents of the Near Eastern kitchen. Centuries of selection have multiplied each family into hundreds of named local varieties, from the soft-seeded dessert pomegranates of Iran to the hard-seeded sour fruit of the Anatolian and Caucasian molasses orchards, yet all are forms of the one ancient tree. The pomegranate is a small, hardy, deciduous tree or many-stemmed shrub, thorny and long-lived, that thrives where the summers are long and hot and the winters cool, and that tolerates drought and saline soil better than almost any other fruit tree. It bears brilliant orange-scarlet flowers, the source of a fast red dye, and its leathery fruit keeps for months in a cool store, qualities that made it, in the ancient world, both a fruit of the living larder and a fruit fit for the tomb, carried into the next life as a promise of plenty and rebirth.

From its Iranian cradle the pomegranate spread early and in every direction, for it was prized at once for its keeping fruit, its jewelled seeds, its medicine, and its heavy freight of symbol. Westward it travelled into Mesopotamia, where it grew in the gardens of Sumer and Babylon and was carved on the columns of palace and temple; into the Levant, where it became one of the Seven Species of the land of Israel and where its image, in bronze and in blue and scarlet thread, adorned the pillars of Solomon's Temple and the hem of the high priest's robe; and into Egypt, where it was grown in the gardens of the New Kingdom, pressed into a tart wine, and laid in the tombs of the pharaohs. It was the seafaring Phoenicians of the Levantine coast who carried the tree the length of the Mediterranean, to Carthage and on to Greece and Italy, so that the Romans, receiving it through the Carthaginians, named it the malum punicum, the 'Punic apple', and later the malum granatum, the 'seeded apple', the name from which half of Europe's words for the fruit descend. The Greeks wove it into their darkest and most beautiful myth, the seeds of the underworld that bound Persephone to Hades and gave the world its winter; and across the whole ancient Near East and Mediterranean the pomegranate became the universal emblem of fertility, abundance, and the life that returns. The second great age of the pomegranate's spread was the medieval Islamic one. The Arabs, who held the fruit in the highest esteem (it is praised by name in the Qur'an as a fruit of paradise), carried it and the art of its cultivation west along the whole arc of their conquests, through North Africa and across the Strait of Gibraltar into Iberia, where it found in the warm soils of Andalucía a second homeland so perfect that the last Moorish kingdom, and the city at its heart, took the fruit's very name: Granada, the pomegranate, whose arms still bear the split red fruit and whose emblem passed, after the Reconquista, into the royal arms of Spain itself. Eastward the Persianate world carried the pomegranate, the anar, into the high cuisine of Mughal India, where the sweet fruit of Kandahar was prized above all others and the dried sour seeds, anardana, became a souring spice of the northern kitchen. And from Spain the pomegranate crossed the Atlantic with the conquistadors and the missionaries, planted in the gardens of New Spain, where its scarlet seeds would one day crown the most patriotic dish of independent Mexico, and carried on by the Franciscans to the mission gardens of California, the dry, hot valleys that have become, in our own century, the centre of the modern pomegranate trade.

The pomegranate has lived two modern lives at once: the ancient fruit of the Near Eastern table, where it never lost its place, and the reinvented 'superfruit' of the twenty-first-century West. Across Iran, the Caucasus, Anatolia, the Levant, and the Indian north it remains exactly what it has always been: the fresh fruit eaten in autumn, the ruby juice pressed from a barrow on the street, and above all the dark, tart molasses that sours and deepens a thousand savoury dishes, from the Persian fesenjan to the Turkish kısır, the Syrian muhammara, the Georgian walnut sauces, and the Azerbaijani narsharab brushed over grilled sturgeon. Iran and India are the largest growers, and the fruit runs through the whole life of those countries, eaten, juiced, dried as anardana, and scattered, jewel-bright, over salads, dips, rice, and yoghurt as the universal garnish of the region. In the West the pomegranate was, for most of the twentieth century, a rare and faintly exotic fruit, admired for its beauty and avoided for the labour of seeding it. That changed at the turn of this century, when the California growers of the Wonderful variety, the largest of them turning the fruit into a bottled juice sold on the strength of its antioxidant chemistry, made the pomegranate one of the defining health foods of the age; pomegranate juice, pomegranate seeds sold ready-freed in tubs, and pomegranate molasses borrowed from the Levantine pantry all entered the Western supermarket and the restaurant kitchen within a single decade. The fruit that the Greeks made the food of the dead and the Arabs the fruit of paradise is now smashed for luck at the Greek New Year, brushed over the Persian wedding table, glazed onto the Western roast, and pressed into a juice drunk for its health from Los Angeles to London, the same jewelled fruit, carrying the same freight of fertility and renewal, that was one of the very first the orchard ever held.

Historical Journey of Pomegranate

Isfahan and the Iranian Plateau, Persiac. 4000 BCE

The pomegranate was domesticated in the dry, mountainous heart of the Iranian world, the plateau and its fringes from Transcaucasia to the western Himalaya where the wild tree still grows, and Persia has been its homeland and its high temple ever since. It was among the very first fruits brought into the orchard, set down beside the grape, the fig, and the date, and the Persians made of it everything the fruit could be: the fresh sweet anar eaten in autumn, the ruby juice (ab anar) pressed and drunk, and, from the sour cultivars, the thick dark molasses (rob-e anar) that sours the Persian pot. Both of the great families of the fruit, the sweet dessert pomegranate and the sour cooking pomegranate, were selected here from the one wild stock, and the soft-seeded sweet anar of the Persian and Afghan gardens, above all the legendary fruit of Kandahar, has been prized across the East as the finest of all. In the Persian kitchen the pomegranate is at once fruit, drink, souring agent, and the most beautiful of garnishes. Its supreme dish is fesenjan, the slow stew of poultry in a dark, glossy sauce of ground walnuts and pomegranate molasses, sweet and sour and faintly bitter all at once, the prestige dish of the Gilan coast and of the Persian feast. Ash-e anar, the ruby soup of pomegranate juice, herbs, split peas, and tiny meatballs, is the autumn pottage of the season, and the jewelled seeds are scattered over rice, salad, and the herb platter. On the night of Yalda, the longest night of the year, Iranian families keep watch until dawn over bowls of pomegranates and watermelon, the red fruit a charm of the sun's return.

Jericho and the Land of Canaan, the Levantc. 2800 BCE

The pomegranate spread early out of the Iranian world into the Fertile Crescent and the Levant, where it became one of the most deeply rooted of all the region's fruits. It is one of the Seven Species by which the Hebrew Bible blesses the land of Israel, set down with the wheat, the barley, the vine, the fig, the olive, and the date; its image, worked in bronze, crowned the twin pillars of Solomon's Temple, and golden pomegranates alternated with bells around the hem of the high priest's robe. A tradition holds that the fruit carries 613 seeds, one for each commandment of the Torah, and it is eaten at the Jewish New Year as a wish for a year brimming with good deeds. Across the whole Levant the fruit became a fixture of the table and, in its sour form, the indispensable souring agent of the kitchen: dibs rumman, the pomegranate molasses pressed from the tart fruit and boiled down to a dark, glossy, intensely tangy syrup. That molasses is the soul of the Levantine sour-sweet palate. It deepens muhammara, the Aleppan dip of roasted red pepper, walnut, and chilli; it sharpens the dressing of fattoush, the bread salad of the Levantine table; it is drizzled over labneh and roast aubergine; and in Gaza and the Palestinian coast it is the heart of rummaniyya, the autumn stew of lentils, aubergine, and tahini soured with fresh pomegranate juice and molasses. The fresh seeds, jewel-bright, are scattered over everything, the universal garnish that lifts a plate of hummus, a bowl of labneh, or a platter of rice into something festive.

Goychay and the Kura Valley, Azerbaijanc. 1200 BCE

North of Persia, across the Araxes and along the warm valleys of the Kura, the pomegranate found in the South Caucasus a homeland as devoted as Iran itself, and nowhere more so than in Azerbaijan, where it is the national fruit and the subject of an annual festival at Goychay, the centre of its cultivation. The Azerbaijani orchards grow above all the sour and sour-sweet pomegranates of the molasses tradition, and the country's signature is narsharab, the thick, dark, winey reduction of sour pomegranate juice, salted and sometimes spiced, that is brushed over grilled Caspian sturgeon and lamb kebab and stirred into the pot. The fruit runs through the Azerbaijani table from the festive to the everyday. Lavangi, the great dish of the Caspian littoral of Lankaran and Talysh, is a whole fish or a chicken stuffed with a dark, rich paste of ground walnuts, fried onion, and sour pomegranate paste or narsharab, then baked until the skin crackles; the same sweet-sour-nutty register that makes the Persian fesenjan defines it. Pomegranate seeds and narsharab dress the herb platters, the kebabs, and the salads, and the fruit's deep red is woven, like its taste, into the very identity of the Azerbaijani kitchen.

Tbilisi and Kakheti, Georgiac. 800 BCE

Across the South Caucasus from Azerbaijan, the pomegranate is woven as deeply into the Georgian table, where the marriage of walnut and pomegranate is the signature of the whole national cuisine. The supra, the great Georgian feast, is laid with cold dishes in which a dense, spiced walnut paste is the binding and the jewelled pomegranate seed the crown: the pkhali, the little pâtés of pounded beetroot, spinach, or bean dressed with walnut, herb, and spice and studded with pomegranate; the badrijani nigvzit, the silky fried aubergine rolled around the same walnut filling and scattered with the bright seeds; and the satsivi, the cold sauce of walnuts and spices in which the festive chicken or turkey of the New Year is bathed, finished with pomegranate. The scarlet seed against the pale walnut paste is one of the defining images of the Georgian feast, at once a flavour and a decoration, the fresh sour-sweet burst that cuts the richness of the nut. Pomegranate juice and the sour fruit also sharpen the kharcho and the meat dishes of the Georgian pot, and the fruit's place at the table is so secure that no supra of consequence is laid without it.

Athens and the Aegean, Ancient Greecec. 700 BCE

The pomegranate came to the Greek world from the east by way of the Phoenicians, the seafaring traders of the Levantine coast who carried it the length of the Mediterranean; it was through Carthage, the Phoenician city, that the fruit reached Italy, where the Romans named it the malum punicum, the 'Punic apple'. The Greeks made it the heart of their darkest and most beautiful myth. Persephone, daughter of Demeter, was carried into the underworld by Hades, and because there she ate the seeds of a pomegranate she was bound to return to him for a part of every year; her descent is the winter, her return the spring, and the pomegranate is the very pledge of that turning. Sacred to Demeter, to Hera, and to Aphrodite, the fruit became the Greek emblem of fertility, marriage, and the renewal of life. That ancient meaning survives, unbroken, in the Greek kitchen and the Greek year. At the turn of the New Year a pomegranate is dashed to the floor of the threshold in the rite of the podariko, and the more its blood-red seeds scatter, the more fortune the year is held to bring; the seeds crown the polysporia and the memorial wheat of kollyva. And the fruit is preserved, as Greeks have always preserved their fruits, into the glyko koutaliou, the 'spoon sweet': the seeds and juice simmered with sugar and a breath of lemon into a glistening ruby conserve, offered by the spoonful with a glass of cold water to the visitor who crosses the threshold.

Granada, Al-Andalus (Moorish Spain)c. 1250 CE

The Arabs, who held the pomegranate in the highest esteem as a fruit named in the Qur'an among the fruits of paradise, carried it and the science of its cultivation west across North Africa and over the Strait of Gibraltar into Iberia, where the warm, dry soils of Andalucía proved a second homeland. So bound up did the fruit become with the south of Spain that the last and greatest of the Moorish kingdoms, and the city at its heart, took the pomegranate's very name: Granada. After the city fell to the Catholic Monarchs in 1492, the split red fruit passed from the arms of the kingdom into the royal arms of a united Spain, where it remains to this day, the one heraldic charge of the Spanish crown drawn from the kitchen garden. In the Andalusian kitchen the pomegranate keeps its Moorish place, scattered fresh over salads and pressed for its juice. Its emblematic dish is the remojón granadino, the salad of the city of Granada itself: salt cod and sweet oranges dressed with good olive oil, black olives, and a scarlet scatter of pomegranate seeds, a cool, sweet-salt-sour plate that gathers, in one dish, the fruit, the orange, and the olive that the Arabs gave to the Andalusian table. From Spain the pomegranate would cross the Atlantic with the conquistadors and the friars, carried into the gardens of the New World.

Gaziantep and Ottoman Anatolia, Turkeyc. 1500 CE

Anatolia had grown the pomegranate since deep antiquity, but it was the kitchens of the Ottoman world, and above all those of the south-eastern cities along the Syrian frontier, that raised the sour fruit to the centre of a cuisine. Gaziantep, the great food city of the south-east, shares with neighbouring Aleppo the whole sweet-sour, pepper-and-nut idiom of which pomegranate molasses, nar ekşisi, is the keystone. The Turks press the sour pomegranate and boil its juice to a thick, dark, glossy syrup that is one of the defining flavours of the national table, neither lemon nor vinegar but a deep, fruity, tannic sourness that nothing else can replace. Nar ekşisi sours and rounds an astonishing range of Turkish dishes. It binds kısır, the fine bulgur salad kneaded rust-red with tomato paste and molasses and packed with herbs; it sharpens ezme, the crushed raw-vegetable relish of the kebab house; it dresses zeytin ezmesi, the Antep olive and walnut paste, and the figs of incir dolması. Its signature salad is the gavurdağı salatası, the 'infidel mountain' salad of Gaziantep, a chopped salad of tomato, pepper, onion, and a great handful of coarsely crushed walnuts, dressed with olive oil and nar ekşisi and scattered with fresh pomegranate seeds; and the molasses glazes the grilled chicken and wings of the Anatolian table, as in nar ekşili tavuk. Fresh pomegranate, here as everywhere in its range, is the bright red garnish of the meze table.

Delhi and the Mughal North, Indiac. 1550 CE

The pomegranate, the anar, had reached the western edge of the Indian subcontinent in antiquity, carried along the trade roads from its Iranian and Afghan homeland, and the sweet fruit of Kandahar was prized in the north as the finest of dessert pomegranates. It was the Persianate Mughals, however, who fixed the anar in the high cuisine of the plains, bringing with them the Persian word and the Persian habit of cooking with sweet and sour fruit. The fresh sweet seeds were strewn over the jewelled rice and the cooling raita of the imperial table, and the fruit's juice and dried seed found a place among the souring agents of the northern kitchen, beside the tamarind, the lime, and the unripe mango. The pomegranate's most distinctive Indian form is anardana, the dried seeds of the sour wild and cultivated pomegranates of the Himalayan foothills, sun-dried to hard, sticky, dark-red grains and ground to a tart, fruity, faintly smoky souring spice. Anardana sharpens the chana and chole of the Punjab, flavours the stuffed parathas and the dry potato of anardana aloo, and binds the chutneys of the northern table; the fresh seeds, the anar dana of the fruit bowl, crown the raita, the chaat, and the fruit salad with their jewelled colour and their sweet-sour burst.

Puebla and New Spain, Mexicoc. 1571 CE

The pomegranate crossed the Atlantic with the Spanish, carried as seed and cutting into the gardens of New Spain, where the warm highlands of central Mexico suited it as well as Andalucía had. There it took on a wholly new meaning, for its scarlet seed became the crown of the most patriotic dish of the Mexican nation: chiles en nogada. By tradition the dish was made by the Augustinian nuns of Puebla in 1821 to honour Agustín de Iturbide on his return after the treaty that secured Mexican independence, and its three colours are the three of the new flag: the green of the parsley and the roasted poblano chilli, the white of the cold walnut-and-cream sauce, the nogada, and the red of the pomegranate seeds scattered over the top. It is a dish of a single brief season, the late summer and early autumn weeks when the new walnuts and the ripe pomegranates coincide, and it gathers, in one plate, the Old World fruit and the New World chilli into the very emblem of Mexican independence. Beyond it the fruit is pressed, as everywhere it grows, into a fresh agua, the agua de granada, the ruby pomegranate water of the Mexican table, sweet, cooling, and the same brilliant red as the seeds that crown the national dish.

The San Joaquin Valley, California, United Statesc. 2002 CE

The pomegranate reached California as the almond, the olive, and the grape had done, carried north by the Spanish Franciscan missionaries who planted Mediterranean orchards along the mission chain in the later eighteenth century. For two centuries it remained a minor garden fruit and a Christmas curiosity, admired for its beauty and shunned for the labour of seeding it. Then, in the dry, hot floor of the San Joaquin Valley, the centre of the modern industry, the growers of the Wonderful variety, the large, deep-red, soft-seeded sweet pomegranate bred for the American market, transformed the fruit's fortunes. From around the turn of this century they pressed it into a bottled juice and sold it on the strength of its antioxidant chemistry, and within a single decade the pomegranate passed from the margins to the centre of the Western diet. Pomegranate juice, tubs of ready-freed seeds, and pomegranate molasses borrowed from the Levantine pantry all entered the supermarket and the restaurant kitchen together, and the fruit became one of the defining health foods of the age. In the contemporary Western kitchen the seeds jewel the salad and the grain bowl, the molasses glazes the roast, and the juice reduces to a sticky-sweet sauce brushed over salmon or lamb, as in the pomegranate-glazed salmon of the modern Californian table: the ancient fruit of paradise, reborn as a fruit of health, at the far western edge of its five-thousand-year journey.

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The Gastrographer

Mapping Culinary History

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Ingredient originTrade or transit route
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c. 2002 CE
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Pomegranate

Pomegranate

Punica granatum; the dwarf ornamental is var. nana, and the wild Socotran relative is the separate species Punica protopunica

FruitsLythraceae

🌍Origin

The temperate belt that runs from the Iranian plateau and the South Caucasus eastward through the mountains of Central Asia to the western Himalaya of northern India, where the wild pomegranate still grows on dry, stony hillsides — Domesticated across Persia and the wider Iranian world in the fourth millennium BCE; one of the first fruit trees brought into the orchard, carried west by the Phoenicians and the Arabs and east by the Mughals, and at last across the Atlantic by the Spanish

🌱Domestication

The pomegranate is one of the oldest of all the cultivated fruits, taken into the orchard at the very dawn of horticulture alongside the grape, the fig, the olive, and the date. It is a single species, Punica granatum, and unlike the plum or the cherry it was not domesticated twice at opposite ends of the world; its homeland is the dry, mountainous belt that runs from the Iranian plateau and Transcaucasia through Central Asia to the foothills of the western Himalaya, and from that one cradle every cultivated pomegranate descends. The fruit is a botanical curiosity, neither a true berry of the common kind nor a stone fruit, but a balausta: a leathery-skinned globe, crowned with the persistent calyx that gave the medieval crown its shape, and packed within with hundreds of seeds, each sheathed in a translucent jewel of juice-laden flesh called the aril. It is the aril, not the bitter pith or the papery membranes that divide the chambers, that is eaten, and the great labour of the pomegranate has always been the freeing of those jewelled seeds from the fruit that holds them.

Like the almond, the pomegranate is one species with a decisive internal division, though here the division is not of poison and safety but of sweetness and sourness. The cultivated pomegranate falls into two broad families, and both are used substantially in the kitchen to this day. The sweet dessert pomegranates, low in acid and high in sugar, are the fruit of the hand and the juice press, eaten fresh and pressed for their ruby juice; the legendary sweet anar of Kandahar and the modern Wonderful variety belong here. The sour or sour-sweet pomegranates, sharp with acid, are the fruit of the pot: too tart to enjoy raw, they are pressed and their juice boiled down to the thick, dark, intensely tangy syrup that the Levant calls dibs rumman, Turkey nar ekşisi, and the Caucasus narsharab, the pomegranate molasses that is one of the great souring agents of the Near Eastern kitchen. Centuries of selection have multiplied each family into hundreds of named local varieties, from the soft-seeded dessert pomegranates of Iran to the hard-seeded sour fruit of the Anatolian and Caucasian molasses orchards, yet all are forms of the one ancient tree.

The pomegranate is a small, hardy, deciduous tree or many-stemmed shrub, thorny and long-lived, that thrives where the summers are long and hot and the winters cool, and that tolerates drought and saline soil better than almost any other fruit tree. It bears brilliant orange-scarlet flowers, the source of a fast red dye, and its leathery fruit keeps for months in a cool store, qualities that made it, in the ancient world, both a fruit of the living larder and a fruit fit for the tomb, carried into the next life as a promise of plenty and rebirth.

Global Voyage

From its Iranian cradle the pomegranate spread early and in every direction, for it was prized at once for its keeping fruit, its jewelled seeds, its medicine, and its heavy freight of symbol. Westward it travelled into Mesopotamia, where it grew in the gardens of Sumer and Babylon and was carved on the columns of palace and temple; into the Levant, where it became one of the Seven Species of the land of Israel and where its image, in bronze and in blue and scarlet thread, adorned the pillars of Solomon's Temple and the hem of the high priest's robe; and into Egypt, where it was grown in the gardens of the New Kingdom, pressed into a tart wine, and laid in the tombs of the pharaohs. It was the seafaring Phoenicians of the Levantine coast who carried the tree the length of the Mediterranean, to Carthage and on to Greece and Italy, so that the Romans, receiving it through the Carthaginians, named it the malum punicum, the 'Punic apple', and later the malum granatum, the 'seeded apple', the name from which half of Europe's words for the fruit descend. The Greeks wove it into their darkest and most beautiful myth, the seeds of the underworld that bound Persephone to Hades and gave the world its winter; and across the whole ancient Near East and Mediterranean the pomegranate became the universal emblem of fertility, abundance, and the life that returns.

The second great age of the pomegranate's spread was the medieval Islamic one. The Arabs, who held the fruit in the highest esteem (it is praised by name in the Qur'an as a fruit of paradise), carried it and the art of its cultivation west along the whole arc of their conquests, through North Africa and across the Strait of Gibraltar into Iberia, where it found in the warm soils of Andalucía a second homeland so perfect that the last Moorish kingdom, and the city at its heart, took the fruit's very name: Granada, the pomegranate, whose arms still bear the split red fruit and whose emblem passed, after the Reconquista, into the royal arms of Spain itself. Eastward the Persianate world carried the pomegranate, the anar, into the high cuisine of Mughal India, where the sweet fruit of Kandahar was prized above all others and the dried sour seeds, anardana, became a souring spice of the northern kitchen. And from Spain the pomegranate crossed the Atlantic with the conquistadors and the missionaries, planted in the gardens of New Spain, where its scarlet seeds would one day crown the most patriotic dish of independent Mexico, and carried on by the Franciscans to the mission gardens of California, the dry, hot valleys that have become, in our own century, the centre of the modern pomegranate trade.

🍽Modern Culinary Role

The pomegranate has lived two modern lives at once: the ancient fruit of the Near Eastern table, where it never lost its place, and the reinvented 'superfruit' of the twenty-first-century West. Across Iran, the Caucasus, Anatolia, the Levant, and the Indian north it remains exactly what it has always been: the fresh fruit eaten in autumn, the ruby juice pressed from a barrow on the street, and above all the dark, tart molasses that sours and deepens a thousand savoury dishes, from the Persian fesenjan to the Turkish kısır, the Syrian muhammara, the Georgian walnut sauces, and the Azerbaijani narsharab brushed over grilled sturgeon. Iran and India are the largest growers, and the fruit runs through the whole life of those countries, eaten, juiced, dried as anardana, and scattered, jewel-bright, over salads, dips, rice, and yoghurt as the universal garnish of the region.

In the West the pomegranate was, for most of the twentieth century, a rare and faintly exotic fruit, admired for its beauty and avoided for the labour of seeding it. That changed at the turn of this century, when the California growers of the Wonderful variety, the largest of them turning the fruit into a bottled juice sold on the strength of its antioxidant chemistry, made the pomegranate one of the defining health foods of the age; pomegranate juice, pomegranate seeds sold ready-freed in tubs, and pomegranate molasses borrowed from the Levantine pantry all entered the Western supermarket and the restaurant kitchen within a single decade. The fruit that the Greeks made the food of the dead and the Arabs the fruit of paradise is now smashed for luck at the Greek New Year, brushed over the Persian wedding table, glazed onto the Western roast, and pressed into a juice drunk for its health from Los Angeles to London, the same jewelled fruit, carrying the same freight of fertility and renewal, that was one of the very first the orchard ever held.

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