Deliplants are splice or
neogen
plants. The originals were designed to
provide equivalents to the animal products once consumed by human
baselines
on
Old
Earth: not only the muscle or fatty tissue and various
edible organs of various animal species, but also other products such
as eggs, milk, blood or cheese. The name was intended to suggest the
Late
Information Age English words "delicatessen" and "delicious."
The product of a deliplant is usually in the form of a seed or fruit
that is either held well off the ground or protected by a thick rind.
The fruit of deliplants is designed to be harvested and eaten (or in
some cases dried or otherwise preserved) within a few weeks of
maturity. Occasional experiments over the years with plants that
produce similar tissues in their stems or roots have not generally been
a success; they are too vulnerable to spoilage, especially if they are
in contact with the soil, unless their "meat" is sufficiently dry and
hard to discourage bacterial growth. A deliplant may be a vine, bush,
herb or tree. Originally these were descendants of Old Earth's
domesticated food plants and recognisable as such. The fruit was also
recognisable from its form and colour as some traditional animal
product (though of course today only students of Old Earth history
could reliably make that identification). Since then, of course, the
designs for deliplants and their fruits have diversified. They
may be
far removed from their ancestors both in the form of the plant and in
the appearance, taste and texture of the fruit.
For millennia now, especially in cultures that prefer "natural" to
nanofactured food, deliplants have been an essential part of the diet
for any bionts who are of carnivorous or omnivorous stock. This is
especially true in the civilized portions of the Terragen sphere, where
the use of even low-grade sentient beings for food may be prohibited by
local law or custom.
Deliplants are of ancient derivation; the first introductions date back
to the dawn of the Interplanetary Age in the 2nd century. Their genesis
followed hard on the widespread availability of safe and reliable
genetic engineering (earlier genetic manipulations being so chancy as
not to be worthy of the term "engineering"). In the waning years of the
1st century the precursors of true gengineers had already introduced
standard grains such as rice or wheat that carried the full range of
amino acids that are necessary for human baseline health. They had also
introduced genes for other essential vitamins into the vegetable crops
of the time. Though this made reliance on an exclusively vegetable diet
practical
and convenient for the first time in human history, it did not satisfy
the carnivorous tastes of a species that had evolved as a hunter as
well as a gatherer. In consequence many humans still raised and killed
animals for food if they could afford to do so, despite ethical
pressure from some groups to cease the practice and despite the
considerable cost involved in doing so on the crowded surface of Old
Earth or in the thickly settled habs of the day. Some early
gengineered
fungi, the meatmushrooms, were intended to provide a cheap alternative,
but unfortunately the introductory versions were grown on waste matter.
Though they were perfectly delicious and wholesome and have been widely
used and highly esteemed in times since, they acquired the stigma of
being "sewerfoods" and were avoided even by the poorest folk of the
day. The first deliplants, on the other hand, were attractive to the
eye and were grown in the sunlight and open air in ordinary soil. The
ready acceptance of deliplants changed Terragen biont eating habits
forever.
At first, for marketing reasons, the most popular deliplants imitated
the texture, colour and even the shape of popular animal
products.
These early products had names that were suggestive of animal origins.
Today's eggplants, shrimp bushes, porkpear trees, chedurian trees,
salmonberry bushes, crabapples trees and the various kinds of
sausagevine go back to these ancient times. Not long afterwards there
was an explosion of new varieties and each month saw the introduction
of some novelty. On the one hand an ever-increasing range of plant
species was used as primary stock. On the other hand the genome
records from the
Burning
Library Project were used to reproduce the
tastes and textures of such exotica as the meat of elephants, whales,
swordfish, turtles or bustards; such meats had long been forbidden or
simply unavailable because the species involved were protected or
extinct (dodo proved to be particularly popular). There was also a
small explosion in the niche markets for some of the less usual tissue
types. Larkstongue plants and brainberries date from this period and
not many moderns remember now that in the English of the 1st century
"marrow" once referred to a variety of squash, or that "liverwort" once
referred to a simple plant. Many of these early favourites became
extinct during the
Nanoswarms,
but many were preserved and many more
invented in isolated habs and enclaves during those dark times.
Deliplants of one sort or another have since been planted wherever
Terragen bionts have settled and have continued to diversify. There are
many millions of species and varieties now on record.
Some religious and ethnic groups chose to extend their dietary
prohibitions to gengineered plants according to the gene sequences the
plants carried. Thus, many Jewish and Muslim and some variant Christian
groups abstained from the early porkapple trees and hambushes, Hindus
would not eat steakoak fruit and the most conservative Jews refused
nearly the entire suite of deliplant meats excepting those that
qualified as kosher. Likewise some Jains and some
Nuagers
refused to
ingest anything that even so much as contained the genetic material of
any animal (many Nuagers also refused to eat any gengineered materials
at all on the principle that they were not natural). On the other hand,
some other vegan and vegetarian Buddhists, Jains and Nuagers rejoiced
in the advent of species that could provide such attractive sustenance
without inducing suffering in any other sentient being. In Old Earth's
English-speaking cultures the consumption of dog- or horse-derived
deliplants was considered unacceptable by some. Religious or cultural
prohibitions of a similar kind continue to this day. The
Francisclarans,
for instance, object to the "use" of any sentient
being, even in something so remotely removed as its genome. In parts of
the
Stellar
Umma there are fairly elaborate lists of permissible and
forbidden fruits based on their genetic assays. In some branches of
today's Evangelical Orthodox Catholic Christianity it is customary for
believers from omnivorous
clades to
abstain from certain kinds of
deliplant fruits on certain days or seasons. There are also some
continuing cultural and clade-based biases. Many modern human
nearbaseline cultures avoid deliplants that carry code from the human
genome, though as early as the
Interplanetary
Age such early deliplants
as "Carib Delight" have been popular in certain circles. The Long Pig
series of cultivars is eaten with great enthusiasm by some carnivorous
or omnivorous bionts, particularly by provolves and splices derived
from the larger canids, hyaenids and felids of Old Earth and by the
various "dragon" and "manticore" neogens. Splices from some reform
sects of the Children of Moreau movement still consume blood oranges
with human or other flavours in their rites, much to the discomfort of
other neighbouring sophonts. Every year a small percentage of Reform
Moreauvians find this symbolic food insufficient and progress to some
more fundamentalist expression of their faith. Iin some places blood
oranges are illegal on the theory that they encourage such thoughts.
Many modern deliplants are not immediately identifiable as an imitation
of any particular original animal product. This has been partly a
response to some of the dominant cultures in the time since, many of
which would have been repulsed at the idea of eating animals at all.
However for the most part it has simply been an exploration of new
culinary and genetic combinations. The crunchy texture and meaty taste
of the steakapples popular today would be a good example. Though the
various early varieties of deliplant were not capable of reproduction
(in part in an attempt to protect patents), it has long been the custom
to create varieties that set seed or can be propagated by cuttings.
Many a modern
prim
society grows deliplants alongside more conventional
Old Earth crops and on many terraformed worlds varieties of deliplant
have escaped into the wilds or have been purposely designed to thrive
there.
Much attention has gone into making deliplants attractive in leaf,
flower and fruit according to the aesthetic standards of the local
clade and culture – some are highly valued as ornamentals. The
flavours
and odours of most modern deliplants are also designed to be
attractive. A few, of course, are unpopular outside their original
context, and there are some niche specialities that are appreciated
only
by a few. The
Alchemists,
for instance, have some distinctly
tumorous-looking varieties that are quite repulsive to most other
clades; the soft rubbery flesh-coloured stems of their bloodapple trees
are particularly disgusting to outsiders. Cultivating or consuming the
"Limburger" variety of chedurian, with its hints of ripe durian and
various powerfully flavoured Old Earth cheeses, is illegal in some
small habs or even in public spaces within larger habs and colonies;
the odour is simply too powerful, penetrating and persistent.
Limburger chedurians remain very popular with human nearbaselines and
various hyena and canid provolves in spite of this. Beetlenuts are
quite popular with Tavi and with other bionts who have insectivorous
ancestors but have limited appeal to most human nearbaselines. The same
is true of grub-berries, particularly those designed to wriggle when
picked.
Though there are many exceptions to the general rule, deliplants are
still traditionally created with waxy or leathery skins, most often in
white, brown, or pink tones, to help distinguish them from more
conventional sweet or starchy fruits. The old fashioned cheesefruits
may have the ancient wheel-like shape, waxy covering and soft oily
flesh, while the ancient shrimp bush bears pinkish fruit with a hard
casing reminiscent of chitin and eggplant fruit is oval and white.
There are zero-g and even vacuum adapted deliplants that have become
part of orwood habitats. Some of these cannot be identified as to their
ancestors because they follow the growth habits appropriate to their
environment. Many orwoods have been designed to produce a variety of
deliplant fruits, and some deliplants have been altered to grow on
orwoods as a kind of epiphyte.
Deliplants do not produce as abundantly as some more conventional Old
Earth fruits because of the high nitrogen requirement for their protein
component and the metabolic expense of producing their various fats and
oils. Nevertheless, given moderately good soil, water and sunlight even
a small patch or orchard can produce more than sufficient for the needs
of a typical human nearbaseline.
Common stocks for the vegetable ancestor of early varieties of
deliplants included apple, pear, fig, avocado, durian, breadfruit,
cocoa and mulberry trees, coconut or date palm trees, various
representatives of the genus
Rubus
(raspberries and blackberries),
akebia and grape vines and aubergine, tomato, or pineapple plants, as
well as squash, gourd and melon varieties. Since then they have
diversified a great deal. The first wave of animal-like flavours and
textures included thousands of types and subtypes. Some of the most
notable were various fish (halibut, tuna, salmon, oolichan, swordfish),
a variety of birds (emu, ostrich, lark, bustard, egret and gull in
addition to the more traditional ducks, geese, turkeys, quail, pheasant
and chickens), a few of the tastier reptiles and amphibians (mostly
varieties of turtle or iguana, plus some frogs) and a huge range of
mammals (agouti, walrus, beaver, human, eland, bear, elephant and whale
in addition to the more traditional venison, goat, beef, dog, pork,
horse and the like), as well as some of the invertebrates that had been
traditional human foods (shrimp, crabs, lobster and other decapods,
squid and octopus, clams and oysters of various kinds). Some organ
meats were also replicated (marrow, liver, sweetbreads, etc.). So were
numerous animal products, (mostly dairy products such as yogurts,
cheeses, milk, butter; all popular with humans who had the ability to
digest them), sausages, eggs of all kinds from bird to crocodile,
blood, fish roe and derived fermented items such as shrimp paste or
fish sauce.
Some
typical Old-fashioned Deliplants
Beetlenut: Actually a legume;
the chitinous fruit have the texture and
appearance of the abdomen of a large beetle; not popular with human
nearbaselines.
Blood Orange: A citrus
derivative that has juice with the taste and
nutritional content of blood in a round brownish fruit. Extremely juicy
and bright red when immature, but ripens to a thick blackish
pudding-like consistency.
Chedurian: The original of this
was derived from the durian fruits
popular in Old Earth's Asia, but the fruit had the flavour, texture and
odour of cheddar cheese. Several variants have since been developed,
from soft to hard and from mild to extremely pungent, some of them
containing the same "rotten" odours found in durians and in the
smellier cheeses.
Eggplant: Bears fruits
resembling the eggs of Old Earth birds,
reptiles, or monotremes in various sizes shapes, colours and flavours
depending on the variety, sometimes with a hard calcareous shell and
sometimes in a leathery sack and sometimes as a semi liquid and
sometimes as a solid. "Dinosaur" eggplants became popular at about the
time of the first dinosaur lazurogenes, though of course only size
distinguishes them from bird or crocodile eggs. Eggplants are derived,
oddly enough, from a plant that once bore the same name, now commonly
known as the aubergine.
Guananut: The original tree,
like the cocoa tree from which it is
descended, bears its fruit on the main trunk. The fruits themselves are
green and scaly and taste of iguana.
Hambush: A bizarre hybrid of
the security bush with the porkpear.
Liverwort: A tomato-like plant
bearing brownish mango-shaped fruit,
each having the flavour, texture and nutrient value of uncooked liver.
Marrow: A sprawling annual
plant related to squashes and melons; the
hard calcareous outer shell contains juicy and fatty tissue comparable
to bone marrow. Carnivores particularly enjoy this plant; some enjoy
chewing the rind as much as the soft interior.
Milknut: Derivative of the
coconut, though most varieties have much
thinner shells. The mature fruit contains a rich milky fluid that
resembles mammalian milk of one sort or another. In some varieties this
hardens into various cheese-like substances as the nut ripens.
Porkpear: Actually a plant
derived from the avocado. The flesh
around
the large central seed has the taste and texture of pork. Some
later
variants are spiced with oil of clove or other complex aromatic
substances.
Salmonberry: A small
raspberry-like bush with thimble-shaped compound
fruit that taste of coho salmon; often eaten fresh, or dried for
storage.
Sausagevine: The original
plant,
Akebia quinata, had a
small
sausage-shaped fruit. This was developed into many hundreds of
sub-varieties, some of which may be safely dried for storage.
Shrimpbush: A small bush (under
2 metres) bearing chains of yellow
flowers that develop into long pods; the immature pods taste like Old
Earth crustaceans.
Steakoak: A large tree
ultimately derived from oaks. A central
acorn
remains on the fruit, but it is enclosed in a large fleshy pericarp
about the size of a mango that has the flavour and texture of tender
beef.