Acai Berry Making a Difference in the Bedroom!?
'It gives energy and strength - and it's great for sex'
Alex Bellos travels to the Amazonian source of acai, Brazil's
favourite tipple for improving everything
Rio de Janeiro is the city that worships health and beauty
and where the healthy and the beautiful drink acai. Pronounced
ah-sah-yee, acai is more of a lifestyle option than a foodstuff;
a magic fruit potion that fuels the hedonistic energy of
Brazilian beach life. Shortly after I moved to Rio, I was told
about the acai berry's amazing nutritional properties:
Brazilians believe it gives you strength, energy and is great
for sex. A friend told me that when he was having difficulty in
fathering a child, the first thing his doctor recommended was
'drink lots of acai'. And it worked!'
I took my first sip at one of the juice bars that line the
blocks by the beach. The berry juice is served half-frozen and
its thick gloopiness means that you slurp it up with a spoon.
This seems to accentuate its carnal, brutish aspect. As does the
fact that the people who drink it are invariably nearly naked,
in Speedo trunks or bikinis.
The way it looks is integral to its appeal. It is made from
dark violet berries about the size of a raspberry; a deep, dense
colour that seems weighted down by its nutritional secrets. It
reflects no light and has the texture of mud. I wasn't
immediately sure about the taste, which was very sweet and
medicinal. But by the end of the cup I was hooked. It is fruity
with a chocolatey kick.
The nutritional breakdown of acai is prodigious. It has high
levels of iron, calcium, carbohydrates, fibre and antioxidants.
And energy. A small 100g cup has almost 300 calories. Combined
with the mystique of its Amazonian origins, acai's contents have
made it the beverage of choice for Rio's sporty elite.
Açaí is indigenous to the flood plains of the Amazon estuary.
The acai palm regenerates with ease and in areas where human
development has destroyed natural vegetation the first tree that
grows in its place is acai. (Açaí palms cover an area equivalent
to half the size of Switzerland.) In this region, its abundance
and role as primary nutritional resource cannot be
over-estimated: it is literally the fruit that has saved many
poor families from starvation.
'Açaí is the main food staple of river communities in the
Amazon estuary,' says the agronomist Oscar Nogueira. It is drunk
for every meal - in much the same way as bread or rice is eaten
in other cultures.
Having become an acai fan in Rio I was keen to visit Belém,
the main city in the Amazon estuary and world centre of acai. If
ever a city was so strongly defined by a single fruit, it's
Belém. There is a local saying: 'Who arrives here and stops,
drinks acai and stays.' In Belém more of the fruit is drunk than
milk. An estimated 200,000 litres of the purple liquid is
consumed per day among a population of 1.3 million.
Açaí is highly perishable and the only way it gets to Rio is
in frozen packages. In Belém, the fruit is always consumed
fresh. Since it goes off within 24 hours, in order to service
the population with fresh acai on a daily basis an enormous
infrastructure has grown in Belém that employs an estimated
30,000 people.
The cycle starts in the rainforest. The acai palm has a long
thin trunk up to 25m high and a clutch of branches at the top
from which hang ribbon-like leaves. Hundreds of acai fruits
dangle from branches in clusters that look like nests of
bluebottles.
The fruit picking is done by hand. In the afternoons,
river-dwellers scramble up the trees, cut off the branches and
climb back down again exactly as they have done for hundreds of
years. In the evening, boats containing baskets of acai leave
the rainforest heading for Belém's market, where they arrive in
the middle of the night.
The acai market is a dockside next to the city market. By the
early hours small boats have started arriving with baskets of
the fruit which quickly fill the quay. By 3am men like Armando
Ribeiro arrive.
Armando owns the Casa do Açaí, one of Belém's 3,000 acai
points, where the fruit is pulped,into juice. Armando buys
several baskets of the best açai and takes it back to his
premises, a small patio in a backstreet. When I arrive, shortly
after 11am, Armando has been pulping the fruit for an hour.
Customer demand for acai is at lunchtime, and they prepare it
fresh. He pours the fruit into the pulping machine and keeps on
re-pouring the discharge until the blend is perfect. He sells
three versions; thick (£1), medium (60p) and dilute (40p).
In Belém, you are never more than a block away from an acai
point. Wherever you look, your eye always finds a red acai sign.
I find a bar and order a bowl. It is served like soup. The taste
is almost unrecognisable from what I have become used to in Rio.
The exotic sharpness and zesty kick is not there. The sensation
is of a simple, neutered, bitter freshness. Açái is not a
versatile fruit since it can only be stored frozen and cannot be
cooked, so for the most part, it continues to be drunk just as
the indians have drunk it for centuries.
For acai to catch on outside the Amazon, it needed a pioneer.
That man was Carlos Gracie, the great-grandson of Scottish
immigrants from Dumfries, who was born in Belém in 1902. In his
early teens, a chance meeting with a Japanese immigrant led to
his obsession with the martial art jiujitsu. In 1922 the Gracies
moved to Rio and Carlos opened Brazil's first jiujitsu academy.
When a shop near his Copacabana home specialising in obscure
foods started to import frozen acai, he began to incorporate it
into his diet and also to encourage all his jujitsu students to
drink it. The jujitsu boys were pin-ups with the best bodies:
everyone wanted to know what 'miracle' potion they were
drinking. Soon Rio's surfers became fans, and gradually the
drink crossed over to become part of beach culture. By the early
1990s, no juice bar could exist without selling it.
The boom in acai over the last decade has had more effects
than changing the eating habits of Rio's body-obsessed men (and
women). Scientists have discovered that acai is rich in
anthocyanins, the group of chemicals in red wine that are
believed to lower the risk of heart disease. Swig per swig, acai
contains over 10 times more of them than red wine. It is also
rich in essential fatty acids, calcium and vitamins. Açaí's
recent success is also changing the nature of agriculture in the
Amazon estuary. Agronomists have been successful in developing
ways of cultivating acai sustainably with high yield. In the
last five years acai production has tripled and brought work to
poor rural areas. Belém, now has more than 60 factories that
export. 'Açaí is the most promising product we have here for
development,' says de Jesus.
Açaí was an Amazonian secret that conquered Brazil. Whenever
friends visit Rio they fall in love with the taste. I have lost
count of the number of excited conversations about how we could
export it around the world. I discovered recently that I've been
beaten to it. A company in California now imports it to the US
and next month Selfridges will introduce it to British palates.
It may not be the same as sipping it fresh in Rio, but make no
mistake, one day acai will conquer the globe. |