Lifestyle | paw paw Our Forgotten Fruit: Embrace the Paw Paw George Washington loved them, and you can, too By John Johnson Posted Nov 3, 2009 4:23 PM CST Copied This March 12, 2009 file photo shows a pawpaw tree in Scarsdale, N.Y. Pawpaw has also been called the Hoosier banana, the Michigan banana, the whatever-state-it-grows-in banana. (AP Photo/Lee Reich, FILE) Pity the poor paw paw. It's got a long history in America—George Washington even called the fruit his favorite dessert—but it gets no love today. That's a shame, writes Ari Weinzweig. It's fallen out of favor because the trees are a pain to grow and the fruit doesn't ship well. "Like a lot of the old fruits, the amount of work required to grow 'em versus the yield in picked, ripe paw paws isn't all that great," Weinzweig writes at Atlantic. But give them a chance. The fruit is nutritious, even if the taste is hard to pin down. "Got maybe a hint of lime, a little vanilla, a papaya, maybe a touch of the taste of ripe pear." And it can be turned into gelato, custard, cream, and paw paw pie. Besides, "how can you not be biased towards a Native American fruit called a paw paw?" Read These Next Kansas City Chiefs moving across state line. Feds strike another blow in war on wind turbines. Chevy Chase says SNL50 snub left him hurt. CBS News boss pulls 60 Minutes segment critical of Trump policy. Report an error