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Raisins
Xinjiang
is known as the "home of fruits and melons." Apricots, cantaloupe, and
pomegranates all have claims on the local palate, are heaped in local bazaars
next to bins of saffron tea and walnuts, and are sent to other markets
throughout China as well as other parts of the world. Yet, the raisin gets
lauded even against the very stiff local competition.
The raisin, a wrinkly translucent fruit, is a 2,000-year-old snack in
Northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, a dessert in the desert.
Known as the "green pearl" of West China, it is a cheap delicacy, and an
everyman's staple. The dried green pearl retains its taste longer in an exposed
outdoor market than do vacuum-packed moist raisins.
In Turpan,
a combination of low-lying lands, long hours of sunshine, cool nights, and hot
days produce a seedless white grape inordinately sugary when harvested in
August. Forty days after being plucked from the trellises (wooden fences
supporting the grapevines) and dried in adobe houses, the green-pearl raisin is
ready for shipment to other parts of China as well as all over the world.
The chocolate raisin and the yogurt raisin are also famous kinds in Xinjiang.
The raisins are rich in natural fructose, protein, vitamin, cellulose and
various microelements, with no additives and pigments. They are healthy food
that can be used to help treat cancer.
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