From Divisive Topping to Culinary Darling
Mention pineapple in a culinary context, and for many, the conversation immediately lands on Hawaiian pizza. For years, the fruit has been typecast, seen either as a controversial topping or a kitschy garnish for a tiki cocktail. Its sweetness was often
considered one-dimensional, best reserved for retro desserts like upside-down cake. But a significant shift is underway. Across the globe and here in India, chefs are looking at pineapple with fresh eyes, seeing not a simple sweet fruit, but a complex ingredient capable of adding acidity, texture, and enzymatic power to a wide range of dishes.
The Savory Revolution
The most exciting part of pineapple's renaissance is its embrace in savory cooking. Its natural sugars and acids make it a perfect candidate for caramelization and charring. Grilling pineapple brings out a smoky depth that pairs beautifully with spiced meats like jerk chicken or in pork stir-fries. Top chefs are using it to create complex sauces, glazes, and salsas that cut through the richness of dishes. Think pineapple and jalapeño salsa spooned over fresh fish tacos, or a pineapple-soy marinade for tenderizing beef short ribs. In Thai cuisine, a long-time champion of using fruit in savory dishes, pineapple is a classic component in curries, balancing the heat and adding a sweet-tart dimension. This interplay of sweet, sour, and savory is exactly what modern palates are craving.
Waste Not, Want Not: The Rise of Fermentation
Perhaps the most serious new application for pineapple is in the world of fermentation, driven by a growing commitment to sustainability in kitchens. Chefs and home cooks are now using the entire fruit, including the tough core and prickly skin, to create flavorful beverages. The star of this trend is tepache, a traditional Mexican fermented drink. Made by fermenting pineapple peel and rind with sugar and spices like cinnamon, tepache is a lightly effervescent, tangy, and refreshing drink with a low alcohol content. It's appearing on craft cocktail menus and at health-conscious juice bars, celebrated for its probiotic qualities and its zero-waste ethos. The process is surprisingly simple, relying on the wild yeasts naturally present on the pineapple's skin to kickstart fermentation.
Reinventing Dessert and Drinks
Even in its traditional home of desserts and drinks, pineapple is getting a serious upgrade. Pastry chefs are moving beyond the classic upside-down cake and exploring more nuanced preparations. Think compressed pineapple with herbal ice creams, pineapple and cardamom tarte Tatin, or even molecular gastronomy creations that deconstruct its flavour profile into foams and gels. In the beverage world, pineapple is the flavour of the moment, dominating everything from craft sodas and smoothies to sophisticated cocktails that go far beyond the piña colada. Its tropical profile is being paired with bolder flavours like ginger, mint, and smoky spirits, providing a versatile base for innovation.


















