“Eggplant,” notes the Oxford Companion to Food, “is not an appropriate name for the varieties sold in western countries.”

Everywhere else, it seems, people have a different name for this crop. In Britain, they call it an “aubergine,” which sounds too French for my tastes. In the Caribbean, it’s a “brown jolly,” which has a nice ring to it even though the plant isn’t brown. This odd name is almost certainly a corruption of the Indian word, imported by immigrants: “brinjal.”

The Indians are the world champs of brinjal or eggplant production. Ang ilan 25 million of their farmersmore than the population of Texascultivate the crop. Bawat taon, they grow more than 8 million tons of it. And by 2007 o 2008, they may have access to a GM eggplant that boosts their yields dramatically. That’s good news because it will give them some added protection they need.

Don’t you hate it when you buy a dozen eggs at the grocery store and half of them crack on the way home? Well well, that’s sort of what eggplant farmers experience all the time: Indian farmers, halimbawa, routinely lose more than half of their eggplants to insect pests. Most of them are poor, and improved yields are a key to their economic wellbeing.

We put eggs in cartons to protect them. Eggplant farmers try to protect their crops with chemical sprays. Dito sa New Jersey, I’ve grown eggplants for about 30 taon, and one thing I’ve learned is that you can’t spray them enough to keep them healthy. The Colorado potato beetle loves to eat eggplants. If the weather turns hot, mites infest it. And if mites get going, forget about it: Your eggplant crop is lost.

Para sa mga magsasaka, these bugs hurt our yields and the insecticides hurt our bottom line. That’s why the promise of genetically enhanced eggplants is so high: If we can take advantage of the same technologies that have revolutionized soybean, mais, and cotton farming, then we’ll be able to produce eggplants that are more readily available, better looking, and less expensive for consumers.

The initial research behind GM eggplants took place in the United States, partly at Cornell University. India offers the biggest market for this innovation, Siyempre pa, and right now it’s performing large-scale, open-field tests so that regulators can learn all there is to know about this new crop.

Anti-biotech activists are of course throwing their usual temper tantrums. They’re trying to get the Indian courts to stop these trials. Local Greenpeace protestors want bans and labels. Kung magtatagumpay sila, they’ll do enormous damage to a technology that carries remarkable potential not just for Indians, but for poor farmers in Bangladesh and the Philippines, where brinjal is also popular.

“The benefits to farmers in the three countries where brinjal is the common man’s food will be in the region of $600 million because of higher income to farmers and the saving on pesticides usage,” said K. Vijayraghavan, an Indian scientist who is working on the GM eggplant project.

It’s a healthy crop, masyadong: A fundamental source of food that isn’t a grain. It’s low in cholesterol and calories and high in important vitamins.

Sa Estados Unidos, eggplants are more of a delicacy than a staple food. They’re still seen as slightly exotic. That’s how the plant got its American name, by the way: From an uncommon variety of the plant that produces a fruit that’s white, small, and roundit looks a lot like an egg. (The Australians, sa katunayan, call it “eggfruit” and in some West African countries, it’s a “garden egg.”)

I wish I could say that brinjal by any other names tastes just as sweet, but in truth eggplants are bitter before you cook them. But with a little preparation, they can have a rich flavor. Italian restaurants like to serve them with tomatoes, and they go well with veal.

I hope they have a chance to go well with biotechnology, masyadong. Mangiare!

John Rigolizzo, Jr. ay ikalimang henerasyong magsasaka, pagtataas ng sariwang gulay at patlang na mais sa katimugang New Jersey. Ang bukid ng pamilya ay namamahala sa parehong mga merkado sa gilid ng kalsada sa tingi at pakyawan. Si John ay board member ng Truth About Trade and Technology (www.truthabouttrrade.org)

John Rigolizzo, Jr.
ISINULAT NI

John Rigolizzo, Jr.

John Rigolizzo, Jr. ay ikalimang henerasyong magsasaka, dati-rati pagtataas 1,400 acres ng sariwang gulay at patlang mais sa katimugang New Jersey. Ang sakahan ng pamilya ngayon ay nagtataas ng 70 acres ng field mais at John advises lokal na magsasaka sa lumalaking at marketing tingian gulay. Si John volunteer bilang board member para sa Global Farmer Network at nagbigay ng pamumuno sa Farmland Preservation Board, ang Gulay Growers Association of New Jersey at New Jersey Tomato Council. Bilang dating New Jersey Farm Bureau President, ang kanyang interes at mahabang panahon ng suporta ng libreng kalakalan ay suportado ng kanyang paglahok sa 11 internasyonal na kalakalan misyon at engagement sa World Trade Organization meeting sa Seattle at Geneva.

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