Labu siam (chayote, *Sechium edule*) is a New World cucurbit introduced to Southeast Asia via the European colonial spice trade, fully absorbed into Indonesian cooking by the 19th century. It is one of the most neutral-flavoured vegetables in the Indonesian repertoire — mild, slightly sweet, with a crisp-to-tender texture depending on cooking time — and this neutrality is its culinary value. Where bold vegetables (bitter melon, cassava leaf, kangkung) assert themselves in any preparation, labu siam accepts the character of whatever surrounds it: it becomes coconut-rich in lodeh, spice-forward in curry, and clean in clear soup. It is the ingredient that gives the cook control.
Labu Siam / Jepan — Sechium edule, The Neutral Canvas
Indonesian Deep Extraction — Batch 14