What is Tapioca?
Tapioca is a starch extracted from the roots of the cassava plant, a species native to the North and Northeast regions of Brazil. It is a perennial shrub adapted to the hot conditions of tropical lowlands. Cassava copes better with poor soils than many other food plants.
Tapioca is a staple food for millions of people in tropical countries. It provides only carbohydrate food value, and is low in protein, vitamins and minerals.
Tapioca is available in a variety of forms, including flour, meal, flakes, and pearls. Pearls are the most widely available shape; sizes range from about 1 mm to 8 mm in diameter, with 2–3 mm being the most common. People commonly use tapioca to make tapioca pudding and bubble teas. Tapioca is also useful as a thickener in pies. It is used to thicken foods such as puddings, noodles, bread, and others. Tapioca starch is prepared by cooking cassava, drying it, processing it, and then cooking it again.
Origins of Tapioca
The origin of tapioca is in the tropical areas of American continents, especially in South America. The countries such as Guatemala, Mexico, Peru, and Honduras planted cassava three to five thousand years before the plant was distributed across the Americas and elsewhere.
Among major tapioca-producing countries such as Brazil, Nigeria and Indonesia, Thailand is the largest producer of tapioca starch with the capacity of over 2 million tons annually. The production technology is most advanced, and the Thai tapioca starch is known for its high quality at comparable prices.
What is Tapioca used for?
Tapioca is a grain- and gluten-free product that has many uses:
Gluten– and grain-free bread. Tapioca flour can be used in bread recipes, although it’s often combined with other flours.
Flatbread. It’s often used to make flatbread in developing countries. With different toppings, it may be eaten as breakfast, dinner, or dessert.
Puddings and desserts. Its pearls are used to make puddings, desserts, snacks, or bubble tea.
A Thickener. It can be used as a thickener for soups, sauces, and gravies. It’s cheap and has a neutral flavor and great thickening power.
Binding agent. It’s added to burgers, nuggets, and dough to improve texture and moisture content, trapping moisture in a gel-like form and preventing sogginess.
In addition to tapioca’s use in cooking, tapioca pearls have been used to starch clothing by being boiled with the clothes.
Nutritional Value
Tapioca is high in carbs and calories, so it is not a traditionally healthful food. However, it can help a person meet the recommended daily allowance of several important nutrients. It can also be a tasty, nutritious food choice for people who need to gain weight.
Why Tapioca Flour Is Not Keto Approved. While tapioca may be approved for paleo or the Whole30, it is not ketogenic friendly (nor is cassava flour). It offers limited nutritional value, being primarily made up of carbohydrates with virtually no protein.
Combining tapioca flour with other gluten-free flour (almond or coconut flour) improves its nutritional value. Tapioca contains a small amount of resistant starch. Resistant starch reduces inflammation and harmful bacteria in our gut and promotes beneficial bacteria.
Tapioca Pudding Recipe
Ingredients
1/2 cup small pearl tapioca* (not instant tapioca)
3 1/2 cups milk
½ cup heavy cream
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
2 large eggs
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Instructions
- Add milk, cream, sugar and salt to a saucepan over medium heat. Bring to a simmer, then stir in tapioca and reduce heat to low. Cook, stirring often, until mixture has slightly thickened, and the tapioca pearls have plumped and softened, about 45 minutes.
- Add the eggs to a bowl and whisk to combine.
- Add a spoonful of hot tapioca mixture to the beaten eggs, stirring well as you pour it in. Repeat with another few spoonful’s of hot tapioca, stirring after each. (This helps temper the eggs and bring them to a warm temperature without “scrambling” them.)
- Add tempered egg mixture to the saucepan with tapioca and stir well to combine. Cook for 2-5 more minutes, just until thickened (keep in mind it will continue to thicken as it cools). Remove from heat and stir in vanilla.
- Transfer to a serving bowl and place a piece of plastic wrap directly on the surface of the pudding (to keep it from forming a rubbery skin on the surface). Allow it to cool before serving. Serve either warm or chilled.
Tapioca is processed in tropical climates around the world. Thailand and Vietnam dominated tapioca exports with a total share of 96% in the exported volume in terms of value. An unusual drought struck Taiwan, the place where most of the tapioca pearls that end up in the US are produced. The country saw precipitation at its lowest levels in 56 years, causing a government-sanctioned water rationing that lowered the production capacity of all kinds of products, including tapioca pearls.
Regardless of the restrictions imposed by mother nature, the USA Tapioca market is projected to surpass a value of $ 1.1 billion in 2023.
So now it’s your turn. Let us know if you have used tapioca in any recipes. We’d love to hear from you.
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