Or beans by any name taste the same…
Or beans of the same name are not the same…
Or things I learn through blogging…
They’re called câmangyáng in Kapampangan and sitaw in Tagalog. All my life I thought they were called string beans in English. Weren’t we taught that at home and in school and aren’t they labelled as such in groceries? Or have I been an ignoramus all these years? Or could it be a Filipinism or a Kapampanganism? How did I find this out if not through blogging? As it happens, in some parts of the world, string beans are what we call bitsuelas (habitsuelas in Tagalog) or Baguio beans here. They are also called French beans, green beans and snap beans in some places. Oh what confusion! But then again, that’s why common names are almost always common only to a place. If I travel to another country, how do I get what I want if I can’t see it yet? The scientific name! Vigna unguiculata ssp. sesquipedalis, also Vigna sinensis for the beans you see in the picture above and Phaseolus vulgaris L. for the snapbeans, the picture of which I will take the next time I am in its presence. Hehe, as if people in restaurants and marketplaces are conversant with the system devised by Carolus Linnaeus. “A plate of Arachis hypogaea and some Zea mays on the cob to snack on, please.” That would be the day!
Now, how did all this begin? In mid-November, Renee at Shiokadelicious! posted her Long Horny Beans entry. In the succeeding discussion we found out that what we call string beans in the Philippines and in Singapore are not the same species. From the comments it dawned on me that the Tagalog sitaw is most probably closely related to the Hokkien chai tau. Ooohhh, it was getting interesting, related to what I was planning to trace food pathways. But that’s for another post.
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