My nopales always seem to taste amazingly fresh and lemony.
Here are some I picked this morning, and they were wonderfully lemon flavoured.
But most of what I've read about them describes them as not tasting of very much, or maybe a hint of lemon. I've been struggling to find ways to serve them so that the lemon flavour complements the rest of the dish instead of competing with it.
And then I stumbled on this...
It turns out that during the day, the plant closes all its stomata breathing holes up to conserve
water. Then during the night it opens them up and captures as much as possible of the C02 that enters the plant in the form of
malic acid (found in many fruits, and first found in
apple juice, hence the name). Then during daylight hours the C02 is released so that the plant can use it to photosynthesize.
The
wikipedia entry on cacti explains it like this -
Like other succulent plants, most cacti employ a special mechanism called "crassulacean acid metabolism" (CAM) as part of photosynthesis. Transpiration, during which carbon dioxide enters the plant and water escapes, does not take place during the day at the same time as photosynthesis, but instead occurs at night. The plant stores the carbon dioxide it takes in as malic acid, retaining it until daylight returns, and only then using it in photosynthesis. Because transpiration takes place during the cooler, more humid night hours, water loss is significantly reduced.
So now, of
course, I have to remember to conserve
enough energy so I can pick another nopale this evening as the light fades so I can do a taste comparison.
Then I can re-think all my recipes. Again...