Carob Bean
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The carob ( ; ''Ceratonia siliqua'') is a Flowering plant, flowering evergreen tree or shrub in the Caesalpinioideae sub-family of the legume family, Fabaceae. It is widely cultivated for its edible fruit, which takes the form of seed pods, and as an ornamental tree in gardens and landscapes. The carob tree is native to the Mediterranean region and the Middle East. Portugal is the largest producer of carob, followed by Italy and Morocco. In the Mediterranean Basin, extended to the southern Atlantic coast of Portugal (i.e., the Algarve region) and the Atlantic northwestern Moroccan coast, carob pods were often used as animal feed and in times of famine, as "the last source of [human] food in hard times". The ripe, dried and sometimes toasted pod is often ground into carob powder, which is used as a ersatz good, substitute for cocoa powder; this often occurred in the 1970s natural food movement. The powder and chips can be used as a chocolate alternative in most recipes. The plant's seeds are used to produce locust bean gum or carob gum, a common thickening agent used in food processing.


Description

The carob tree grows up to tall. The Crown (botany), crown is broad and semispherical, supported by a thick trunk with rough brown bark and sturdy branches. Its leaves are long, alternate, pinnate, and may or may not have a terminal leaflet. It is frost-tolerant to roughly . Most carob trees are dioecious and some are Hermaphroditic plant, hermaphroditic, so strictly male trees do not produce fruit. When the trees blossom in autumn, the flowers are small and numerous, spirally arranged along the inflorescence axis in catkin-like racemes borne on spurs from old wood and even on the trunk (cauliflory); they are pollinated by both Wind-pollinated, wind and Insect-pollinated, insects. The male flowers smell like human semen, an odor that is caused in part by amines. The fruit is a legume (also known commonly, but less accurately, as a ''Seed pod, pod''), that is elongated, compressed, straight, or curved, and thickened at the sutures. The pods take a full year to develop and ripen. When the sweet, ripe pods eventually fall to the ground, they are eaten by various mammals, such as swine, thereby dispersing the hard inner seed in the excrement. The seeds of the carob tree contain leucodelphinidin, a colourless flavanol precursor related to leucoanthocyanidins.


Etymology

The word "carob" comes from Middle French ' (modern French ), which borrowed it from Arabic language, Arabic (''kharrūb'', "locust bean pod") and Persian ''khirnub'', which ultimately borrowed it perhaps from Akkadian language ' or Aramaic ''ḥarrūḇā''. ' ''Ceratonia siliqua'', the scientific name of the carob tree, derives from the Ancient Greek, Greek ''keratōnía'', "carob-tree" (cf. ''kéras'', "horn"), and Latin ''siliqua'' "pod, carob". In English, it is also known as "John the Baptist, St. John's bread" and "locust tree" (not to be confused with Parkia biglobosa, African locust bean). The latter designation also applies to locust tree, several other trees from the same family. In Yiddish, it is called ''bokser'', derived from the Middle High German ''bokshornboum'' "ram's horn tree" (in reference to the shape of the carob). The Carat (mass), ''carat'', a unit of mass for gemstones, and a Carat (purity), measurement of purity for gold, takes its name via the Arabic ''qīrāṭ'' from the Greek name for the carob seed (lit. "small horn").


Distribution and habitat

Although cultivated extensively, carob can still be found Wild plant, growing wild in eastern Mediterranean regions, and has become Naturalisation (biology), naturalized in the western Mediterranean. The tree is typical in the southern Flora of Portugal, Portuguese region of the Algarve, where the tree is called ''alfarrobeira'', and the fruit ''alfarroba.'' It is also seen in southern and eastern Flora of Spain, Spain (, Catalan language, Catalan / Valencian / Balearic: ''garrofer, garrofera, garrover, garrovera''), mainly in the regions of Andalusia, Murcia, Valencian Community, Valencia, the Balearic Islands and Catalonia (Catalan language, Catalan / Valencian / Balearic: ''garrofer, garrofera, garrover, garrovera''); Flora of Malta, Malta (), on the Flora of Italy, Italian islands of Sicily () and Sardinia (), in Southern Flora of Croatia, Croatia (), such as on the island of Šipan, in eastern Bulgaria (), and in Southern Flora of Greece, Greece, Flora of Cyprus, Cyprus, as well as on many Greek islands such as Crete and Samos Island, Samos. In Flora of Israel, Israel, the Hebrew language, Hebrew name is חרוב (Transliteration, translit. ''charuv''). The common Greek language, Greek name is (Romanization of Greek, translit. ), or (Romanization of Greek, translit. , meaning "wooden horn"). In Flora of Turkey, Turkey, it is known as "goat's horn" (). The various trees known as ''algarrobo'' in Latin America (''Samanea saman'' in Flora of Cuba, Cuba, ''Prosopis pallida'' in Flora of Peru, Peru, and four species of ''Prosopis'' in Flora of Argentina, Argentina and Paraguay) belong to a different subfamily of the Fabaceae: Mimosoideae. Early Spanish settlers named them ''algarrobo'' after the carob tree because they also produce pods with sweet pulp.


Ecology

The carob genus, ''Ceratonia'', belongs to the legume family, Fabaceae, and is believed to be an archaic remnant of a part of this family now generally considered extinct. It grows well in warm Temperate climate, temperate and subtropical areas, and tolerates hot and humid coastal areas. As a xerophyte (drought-resistant species), carob is well adapted to the conditions of the Mediterranean region with just of rainfall per year. Carob trees can survive long periods of drought, but to grow fruit, they need of rainfall per year. They prefer well-drained, sandy loams and are intolerant of waterlogging (agriculture), waterlogging, but the deep root systems can adapt to a wide variety of soil conditions and are fairly Halotolerance, salt-tolerant (up to 3% in soil). After being irrigated with saline water in the summer, carob trees could possibly recover during winter rainfalls. In some experiments, young carob trees were capable of basic physiological functions under high-salt conditions (40 Moles per liter, mmol NaCl/L). Not all legume species can develop a Symbiosis, symbiotic relationship with rhizobia to make use of Nitrogen#Occurrence, atmospheric nitrogen. It remains unclear if carob trees have this ability: Some findings suggest that it is not able to form root nodules with rhizobia, while in another more recent study, trees have been identified with nodules containing bacteria believed to be from the genus ''Rhizobium''. However, a study measuring the Isotopic signature, 15N-signal (isotopic signature) in the tissue of the carob tree did not support the theory that carob trees naturally use atmospheric nitrogen.


Cultivation

The vegetative propagation of carob is naturally restricted due to its low adventitious rooting potential. Therefore, grafting and air-layering may prove to be more effective methods of asexual propagation. Seeds are commonly used as the propagation medium. The sowing occurs in pot nurseries in early spring and the cooling- and drying-sensitive seedlings are then transplanted to the field in the next year after the last frost. Carob trees enter slowly into production phase. Where in areas with favorable growing conditions, the cropping starts 3–4 years after budding, with the nonbearing period requiring up to 8 years in regions with marginal soils. Full bearing of the trees occurs mostly at a tree-age of 20–25 years when the yield stabilizes. The orchards are traditionally planted in low densities of 25–45 trees per hectare (). Hermaphrodite plant, Hermaphroditic or male trees, which produce fewer or no pods, respectively, are usually planted in lower densities in the orchards as pollenizers. Intercropping with other tree species is widely spread. Not much cultivation management is required. Only light pruning and occasional tilling to reduce weeds is necessary. Nitrogen-fertilizing of the plants has been shown to have positive impacts on yield performance. Although it is native to moderately dry climates, two or three summers' irrigation greatly aid the development, hasten the fruiting, and increase the yield of a carob tree.


Harvest and post-harvest treatment

The most labour-intensive part of carob cultivation is harvesting, which is often done by knocking the fruit down with a long stick and gathering them together with the help of laid-out nets. This is a delicate task because the trees are flowering at the same time and care has to be taken not to damage the flowers and the next year's crop. The literature recommends research to get the fruit to ripen more uniformly or also for cultivars which can be mechanically harvested (by shaking). After harvest, carob pods have a moisture content of 10–20% and should be dried down to a moisture content of 8% so the pods do not rot. Further processing separates the kernels (seeds) from the pulp. This process is called kibbling and results in seeds and pieces of carob pods (kibbles). Processing of the pulp includes grinding for animal feed production or roasting and milling for human food industry. The seeds have to be peeled which happens with acid or through roasting. Then the endosperm and the embryo are separated for different uses.


Pests and diseases

Few pests are known to cause severe damage in carob orchards, so they have traditionally not been treated with pesticides. Some generalist pests such as the larvae of the leopard moth (''Zeuzera pyrina'' L.), the dried fruit moth (''Cadra calidella''), small rodents such as rats (''Rattus spp.'') and gophers (''Pitymys spp.'') can cause damage occasionally in some regions. Only some cultivars are severely susceptible to mildew disease (''Oidium ceratoniae'' C.). One pest directly associated with carob is the larva of the carob moth (''Myelois ceratoniae'' Z.), which can cause extensive postharvest damage. ''Cadra calidella'' attack carob crops before harvest and infest products in stores. This moth, prevalent in Cyprus, will often infest the country's carob stores. Research has been conducted to understand the physiology of the moth, in order to gain insight on how to monitor moth reproduction and lower their survival rates, such as through temperature control, pheromone traps, or parasitoid traps.


Production

In 2022, world production of carob (as locust beans) was estimated to be 56,423 tonnes, although not all countries known to grow carob reported their results to the Food and Agriculture Organization Corporate Statistical Database, UN Food and Agriculture Organization. Production amounts for Turkey and Morocco accounted for nearly all the world total reported in 2022.


Cultivars and breeding aims

Most of the roughly 50 known cultivars are of unknown origin and only regionally distributed. The cultivars show high genetic and therefore morphological and agronomical variation. No conventional breeding by controlled crossing has been reported, but selection from orchards or wild populations has been done. Domesticated carobs (''C. s.'' var. ''edulis'') can be distinguished from their wild relatives (''C. s.'' var. ''silvestris'') by some fruit-yielding traits such as building of greater beans, more pulp, and higher sugar contents. Also, genetic adaptation of some varieties to the climatic requirements of their growing regions has occurred. Though a partially successful breaking of the dioecy happened, the yield of hermaphroditic plant, hermaphrodite trees still cannot compete with that of female plants, as their pod-bearing properties are worse. Future breeding would be focused on processing-quality aspects, as well as on properties for better mechanization of harvest or better-yielding hermaphroditic plants. The use of modern breeding techniques is restricted due to low Polymorphism (biology), polymorphism for molecular markers.


Uses


Food

Carob products consumed by humans come from the dried, sometimes roasted, Seed pod, pod, which has two main parts: the Pulp (fruit), pulp accounts for 90% and the seeds 10% by weight. Carob pulp is sold either as flour or "chunks". The flour of the carob embryo (seed) can also be used for human and animal nutrition, but the seed is often separated before making ''carob powder'' (see section on ''locust bean gum'' below). Carob pods are mildly sweet on their own (being roughly one third to one half sugar by dry weight), so they are used in powdered, chip or syrup form as an ingredient in cakes and cookies, sometimes as a substitute for chocolate in recipes because of the color, texture, and taste of carob. In Malta, a Traditional food, traditional Dessert, sweet called ''karamelli tal-harrub'' and eaten during the Christian holidays of Lent and Good Friday is made from carob pods. Dried carob fruit is traditionally eaten on the Jewish holiday of ''Tu Bishvat''.


Carob powder

Carob powder (carob pulp flour) is made of roasted, then finely ground, carob pod pulp.


Locust bean gum

Locust bean gum is produced from the endosperm, which accounts for 42–46% of the carob seed, and is rich in galactomannans (88% of endosperm dry mass). Galactomannans are hydrophilic and swell in water. If galactomannans are mixed with other gelling substances, such as carrageenan, they can be used to effectively thicken the liquid part of food. This is used extensively in canned food for animals in order to get the "jellied" texture.


Animal feed

While chocolate contains the chemical compound theobromine in levels that are toxic to some mammals, carob contains none, and it also has no caffeine, so it is sometimes used to make chocolate-like treats for dogs. Carob pod Flour, meal is also used as an energy-rich Livestock feed, feed for livestock, particularly for ruminants, though its high tannin content may limit this use. Historically, carob pods were mainly used for animal fodder in the Maltese islands, apart from times of famine or war, when they formed part of the diet of many Maltese people. On the Iberian Peninsula, carob pods were historically fed to donkeys.


Composition

The Fruit pulp, pulp of a carob pod is about 48–56% sugars and 18% cellulose and hemicellulose. Some differences in sugar (sucrose) content are seen between Wild plant, wild and Cultivated variety, cultivated carob trees: ~531 g/kg dry weight in cultivated varieties and ~437 g/kg in wild varieties. Fructose and glucose levels do not differ between cultivated and wild carob. The embryo (20–25% of seed weight) is rich in proteins (50%). The testa, or seed coat (30–33% of seed weight), contains cellulose, lignins, and tannins.


Syrup and drinks

Carob pods are about a third to a half sugar by weight, and this sugar can be extracted into a syrup. In Malta, a carob syrup (''ġulepp tal-ħarrub'') is made out of the pods. Carob syrup is also used in Crete, and Cyprus exports it. In Egypt and the Levant, crushed carob pods are heated to caramelize their natural sugars, producing carob molasses. Water and brown sugar are then added to the mixture and boiled for a period of time. The resulting beverage, served cold and known as "kharrub" or "kharoub," is particularly popular during the month of Ramadan. This drink is widely sold by juice shops and street vendors and holds cultural significance in both the Levant and Egypt. In Lebanon the molasses is called ''debs el kharrub'' (literally: molasses of the carob), but people generally shorten it to ''debs''. The molasses has a sweet, chocolate-like flavor. It is commonly mixed with tahini (typically 75% kharrub molasses and 25% tahini). The resulting mixture is called ''debs bi tahini'' and is eaten raw or with bread. The molasses is also used in certain cakes. The region of Iqlim al-Kharrub, which translates to the ''region of the carob'', produces a significant amount of carob. In Cyprus, the dried and milled carob pods are left to soak in water, before being transferred into special containers out of which the carob juice gradually seeps out of and is collected. The juice is then boiled with constant stirring yielding a thick syrup known as ''haroupomelo''. Although this syrup is frequently sold and eaten as is, ''haroupomelo'' is also used as a base for a local toffee-like sweet snack known as ''pasteli''. Constant stirring of the carob syrup causes it to form into a black, amorphous mass which is then left to cool. The mass is then kneaded, stretched and pulled until the fair, golden color and toffee-like texture of ''pasteli'' is obtained. Carob is used for compote, liqueur, and syrup in Turkey, Malta, Portugal, Spain, and Sicily. In Libya, carob syrup (called ''Rub (syrup), rub'') is used as a complement to ''asida'' (made from wheat flour). The so-called "carob syrup" made in Peru is actually from the fruit of the ''Prosopis nigra'' tree. Because of its strong taste, carob syrup is sometimes flavored with orange or chocolate. In Yemen, carob tree is playing a role in controlling diabetes mellitus according to Yemeni folk medicine, and diabetics consume carob pods as a juice to lower their blood sugar levels.


Ornamental

The carob tree is widely cultivated in the horticultural Plant nursery, nursery industry as an ornamental plant for Mediterranean climates and other temperate regions around the world, being especially popular in California and Hawaii. The plant develops a sculpted trunk and the form of an ornamental tree after being "limbed up" as it matures, otherwise it is used as a dense and large Hedge, screening hedge. The plant is very drought tolerant as long as one does not care about the size of the fruit harvest, so can be used in Xeriscaping, xeriscape landscape design for gardens, parks, and public municipal and commercial landscapes.


Timber

In some areas of Greece, viz. Crete, carob wood is often used as a firewood. As it makes such excellent fuel, it is sometimes even preferred over oak or olive wood. Because the much fluted stem usually shows heart rot, carob wood is rarely used for construction timber. However, it is sometimes sought for ornamental work—particularly for furniture design, as the natural shape of the trunk is well-suited to the task. Additionally, the extremely wavy Wood grain, grain of the wood gives carob wood exceptional resistance to Splitting wood, splitting; thus, sections of Carob Trunk (botany), bole are suitable for chopping blocks for splitting wood.


Gallery

File:Blooming carob tree.jpg, Male flowers on a carob tree in Cyprus, which emanate a strong cadaverine odor File:Ceratonia siliqua female flowers a-RJP.jpg, Close-up of female flower on the carob tree File:Ceratonia siliqua green pods.jpg, Green carob fruit pods on tree, long File:Funny fruits.jpg, Fruit of the carob tree File:Carobs.JPG, Carob pods: green (unripe) and brown (ripe) File:Carob tree leaf.JPG, Abaxial and adaxial surfaces of a leaflet from the carob tree File:Ceratonia siliqua MHNT.BOT.2018.6.11.jpg, ''Ceratonia siliqua'' wood – Museum specimen File:Carob cauliflory.jpg, Carob pods growing from trunk (Cauliflory)


See also

* Ratti (unit), Ratti, a seed from which the Indian measure unit "tola" derived


Notes


References


External links


''Carob'' in Fruits of Warm Climates: Julia F. Morton, 1987

U.C.CalPhotos: Carob —''Ceratonia siliqua'' — Photo Gallery
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