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Nutritional Science

The Forgotten Fruit: Why the Native Pawpaw is Poised for a Grocery Store Comeback

By Marcus Thorne May 9, 2026
The Forgotten Fruit: Why the Native Pawpaw is Poised for a Grocery Store Comeback
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You might have seen them at a local farmers market lately. They look like a cross between a green mango and a lumpy potato. If you’ve never tried one, the taste is a shock. Imagine a blend of banana, mango, and vanilla custard with the texture of silk. This is the pawpaw. It is the largest edible fruit native to North America, and for a long time, it was almost completely forgotten by anyone who didn't live in a rural forest area.

For most of the last century, this fruit stayed hidden in the woods. It doesn't ship well, and that is a major problem for big food companies. If you squeeze a ripe pawpaw, it bruises. If you leave it on a shelf, it goes bad in two days. That fragile nature kept it out of supermarkets. But things are changing as people look for local food with deep roots. Scientists and small farmers are now working to bring this forest treat back to our tables.

At a glance

The pawpaw has a deep history and a complex nutritional profile that sets it apart from standard orchard fruits. Here are the basic facts about its rise, fall, and return.

FeatureDetails
Scientific NameAsimina triloba
Native RangeEastern United States and parts of Canada
Peak SeasonLate August through early October
Key NutrientsVitamin C, Magnesium, Iron, and Manganese
Storage Life2 to 3 days at room temperature

A fruit with a presidential past

Long before grocery stores existed, the pawpaw was a staple. Indigenous peoples across the eastern part of the continent grew and moved the trees for centuries. They used the inner bark for rope and the fruit for food. Even early European settlers relied on them. In fact, George Washington liked them chilled as a dessert. Thomas Jefferson even planted them at his home. They were a reliable source of sweetness when sugar was a luxury.

The fruit grows on small trees that love the shade of taller forest canopies. Because they thrive in the understory, they don't need the massive amounts of direct sun that apple or peach trees require. This makes them a hardy choice for low-impact farming. They have their own natural defense system too. The leaves and twigs produce a natural insecticide that keeps most bugs away, so farmers rarely need to use harsh sprays on them.

The science of the custard apple

When we look at what’s inside a pawpaw, the numbers are impressive. They have more protein than most other fruits. While an apple has almost no protein, a pawpaw offers a decent amount per serving. They are also packed with antioxidants. These are the compounds that help your body fight off stress and stay healthy. It’s funny to think that a fruit growing wild in a ditch could be more nutritious than the fancy imported ones we buy at the store, right?

The fats in the pawpaw are also unique. They contain a good balance of fatty acids that are usually found in nuts or seeds. This gives them that creamy, buttery mouthfeel. Unlike a watery citrus fruit, the pawpaw feels substantial. It's more like a meal than a snack. Researchers are currently looking at the compounds in the bark and seeds, which have shown potential in medical studies, though the fruit itself is what most of us care about for breakfast.

Why they are hard to find

If they are so good, why aren't they everywhere? The answer is simple: the skin is too thin. Modern food systems are built on things that can be stacked in a truck and driven three thousand miles. A pawpaw would be mush by the time it reached the next state. Because they ripen all at once and then spoil quickly, they are the ultimate "slow food." You have to be there, at the right time, to enjoy them.

However, new breeding programs are trying to fix this. Some farmers are selecting trees that produce fruit with thicker skins or fewer seeds. They aren't trying to change the soul of the fruit, just making it a bit tougher so more people can try it. There are now pawpaw festivals in states like Ohio and Maryland where thousands of people gather just to eat pawpaw ice cream and jam. It's a grassroots movement to save a piece of our natural heritage.

How to use them in the kitchen

If you manage to find some, don't cook them. The delicate flavor of a pawpaw tends to disappear if you heat it too much. Most people cut them in half and scoop the flesh out with a spoon. You have to be careful to spit out the large, black seeds, as they shouldn't be eaten. The pulp works beautifully in smoothies, puddings, or even mixed into a cold yogurt. It’s a taste of the wild that connects us to the land as it was hundreds of years ago.

The future of the forest orchard

As we worry more about where our food comes from, the pawpaw looks like a winner. It is a native plant that belongs here. It doesn't need extra irrigation in its home range, and it supports local pollinators like the zebra swallowtail butterfly. By bringing these trees back to farms and gardens, we are doing more than just finding a new flavor. We are helping to restore a balance that was lost when we started favoring only a few types of commercial fruit. It's a slow process, but for fans of this creamy forest treat, it's worth the wait.

#Pawpaw fruit# native plants# heirloom ingredients# forest farming# custard apple# local food history
Marcus Thorne

Marcus Thorne

Marcus Thorne is a culinary anthropologist with a passion for recreating forgotten recipes using heirloom ingredients. His work explores the sensory experience and social dynamics embedded within historical culinary traditions, bringing past flavors to contemporary tables.

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