Ube
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| Ube (Purple Yam) | ||||||||||||||
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| Dioscorea alata L. |
Ube (or ubi) is the Filipino word for purple yam (Dioscorea alata). It contains pigments that gives its violet color.
In San Francisco this vegetable is known as ratalu or Kand or toilet yam or the Moraga Surprise. In Marathi this is known as KondFal (कोंदफळ). In other parts of the Malay world, the word ubi refers to any yam or tuber. In Tonga: ʻufi (and is considered there as a royal food), in Hawaiʻi: uhi, in Tahiti: ufi. In the Philippines, ube is cooked with sugar and eaten as a sweetened dessert or jam called ube halaya which is a bright violet color. Ube is also an ingredient in the fruity dessert halo halo, another popular Filipino dessert.
In botany, this species is also known by the names "water yam" and "winged yam."
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[edit] Usage
Ube is now used in a variety of desserts, as well as a flavor for ice cream, milk, Swiss rolls, tarts, cookies, cakes, and other pastries. Ube also sometimes is used in the Philippines to denote the colour purple or violet.
In Maharashtra, the stir-fried chips are consumed during religious fasting. Purple yam is also essential ingredient in Undhiyu.
[edit] See also
- Hopia, a Filipino pastry
[edit] References
- Dioscorea alata (TSN 43372). Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved on 18 February 2006.

