In Praise of Persimmons

persimmons, Fuyu persimmon
ripe Fuyu persimmons

Ah, persimmon season: my favorite time of year to be in Davis, California, and to live in my house.

Nine years ago, when we left San Francisco and bought this place, I disliked almost everything about it (especially that it was not in San Francisco), and really liked only one thing: the mature Fuyu persimmon tree in the northeast corner of our otherwise unremarkable backyard.

Over the years we’ve made a few changes to the house and property so that, if I don’t exactly love the place, I have at least developed some fondness for it. And the persimmon tree remains one of its abiding delights.

Persimmons remind me of Japan, of course. I don’t remember eating any as a small child there, but I was properly introduced when I went back in my early 20s. The fruit-laden limb hanging over a high wall is an iconic sight there, tempting the otherwise law-abiding passer-by or child to become a kaki-dorobō, a “persimmon thief.”

"Hachiya persimmon", snow in Yokohama
Neighbor’s Hachiya persimmon after early snowstorm, Yokohama, Dec. 6, 1987

In the densely packed, older Yokohama neighborhood where my husband and I lived the first year we were married, even tiny yards often featured a lovingly tended persimmon tree. I’m posting a picture I took then of a Hachiya persimmon tree in a neighbor’s yard after an early, surprise snowfall. Funny how memory works, though: I could have sworn there had been more persimmons left on the tree. It’s as if in the intervening decades, they’ve been falling slowly out of the photo. You might have to click to enlarge the photo to even see the fruit.

A few months ago, in one of those serendipitous moments that could only happen in a used bookstore, I found a Japanese children’s book called Kaki (Persimmons). This was at our soon-to-be-only used bookstore in Davis, the wonderful Logos Books.

Kaki, persimmons, Japanese textbook, Yazama Yoshiko
Kaki (Persimmons) book cover

Basically a first-grade primer on what every Japanese kid should know about persimmons, Kaki explains the difference between Fuyu and Hachiya persimmons (which it calls “sweet” and “bitter” persimmons); instructs how to eat and dry and store them; provides recipes for stir-fried persimmon, persimmon sandwiches, and persimmon-leaf tea; and gives step-by-step illustrated instructions for making a persimmon-leaf doll.

I cannot wait to try some of these things, although I’m not sure about the suggestion to hasten the sweetening of Hachiya persimmons by floating them in leftover bathwater. (This doesn’t sound that gross in Japan, where the tub is used for soaking in only after one washes and rinses, but still….) Many pages feature lovely illustrations of perfectly shaped persimmons and elegant persimmon trees.

Our own persimmon tree is an ungainly affair, too tall for its girth and leaning Pisa-like toward the southeast despite some early efforts to straighten it. But it’s hardy and productive. In a good year we get hundreds of persimmons.

persimmons, dehydrator, dried persimmons
Peeled, sliced persimmons on a tray of our dehydrator

This is a good year. My husband and sons and I picked about 80 fruit a couple of weeks ago, and they’re nearly gone. We’ve eaten them fresh, peeled and sliced for a snack or julienned into salads. We’ve given them away to persimmon-loving friends. About half of them ended up in our dehydrator, the better to enjoy persimmons the rest of the year.

And last night my husband made Braised Pork with Fuyu Persimmon, a recipe I found at epicurious.com.  If you are of a pork-eating persuasion, I recommend this dish: (1) It is scrumptious; (2) it makes your house smell amazing; (3) it uses up a pound and a half of persimmons; and (4) it gives your teenage sons an opportunity to take the excess fat rendered from the pork shoulder and make a pork fat lamp at the dinner table.

But that is only 80 persimmons down, and the tree still looks like a penitent, limbs bowed down with the weight of ever riper fruit. That will change tomorrow, when the good folks from Village Harvest come and pick the rest. They’ll leave us whatever we want—I’ll ask for 15–20 pounds—and deliver the rest to a local food bank.

What the harvesters can’t safely reach at the top of the tree will be left for the birds. In the past, I have stood at my window both delighted and unnerved by the sight of flickers, mockingbirds, sparrows, and finches feeding simultaneously in the tree, as if posing for one of those ornithologically replete “Tree of Life” images.

And that reminds me of a wonderful poem: “Persimmons” by Li-Young Lee. A new writer friend here in Davis sent it to me recently after hearing me enthuse about the fruit. You should read the whole thing here, but this is how it ends:

Some things never leave a person:
scent of the hair of one you love,   
the texture of persimmons,
in your palm, the ripe weight.

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