🇰🇮 I-Kiribati Cuisine

Te Tuae

Fermented Coconut Toddy

Prep Time 24 hours
Servings 6
Difficulty Hard

Fresh sap tapped from coconut flower spathes and allowed to ferment naturally into a mildly alcoholic, slightly sour beverage central to I-Kiribati social life.

Ingredients

  • Fresh coconut sap from flower spathe
  • Time for natural fermentation

Instructions

  1. 1 A skilled toddy cutter climbs a coconut palm at dawn to access the unopened flower spathe near the crown.
  2. 2 The spathe tip is sliced thinly and a coconut shell container is tied beneath to catch the dripping sap throughout the day.
  3. 3 Collect the shell in the evening, which will contain about half a liter of sweet fresh sap called te karewe.
  4. 4 To make te tuae, allow the collected sap to sit in a covered container at ambient temperature for twelve to twenty-four hours.
  5. 5 The natural wild yeasts present in the sap will ferment the sugars, creating a mildly fizzy, slightly sour beverage.
  6. 6 Strain through a clean cloth and serve in coconut shell cups at room temperature during evening gatherings.

Did You Know?

Toddy cutting is one of the most respected skills in I-Kiribati culture, and expert cutters can maintain a single palm producing sap continuously for months.

From The Culinary Codex — http://theculinarycodex.com/dish/i-kiribati/te-tuae/