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The following migratory waves were established in Tuamotu and Tahiti in 800 AD, and finally in the Tuha'a Pae. These Polynesian population brought with them edible plants such as the coconut tree, the mape, the bread tree or uru, the yam, the sugar cane, the banana and the rose apple. All of them of Indo-Malay origin.
Poi is a traditional staple food in the Polynesian diet, made from taro.Traditional poi is produced by mashing cooked taro on a wooden pounding board (papa kuʻi ʻai), with a carved pestle (pōhaku kuʻi ʻai) made from basalt, calcite, coral, or wood.
Miti hue is prepared from the young coconut known as 'omoto, a stage where the flesh of the green coconut starts to harden and begins losing its water.The flesh of the 'omoto is cut into pieces and placed in a calabash vessel, with salt water and the heads of freshwater prawns.
Opened in 1972, it’s the oldest continuously operating Chinese restaurant in Tahiti. Their suckling pig with coconut milk is truly outstanding.
The Monoi Tiaré Tahiti is a perfume-oil made by infusing the blossoms of Tiaré flowers in coconut oil. Monoï oil [1] is an infused perfume-oil made from soaking the petals of Tahitian gardenias (best known as Tiaré flowers) in coconut oil. Monoï (pronounced mah-noy) is a Tahitian word meaning "scented oil" in the Tahitian.
Bora Bora. Out of all the incredible islands that comprise French Polynesia, Bora Bora is the crown jewel. Just northwest of Tahiti, the island feels utterly remote while being easily accessible ...
Tahiti in the Windward group is the largest of the Society Islands, with an area of 1,042 km 2. The highest elevation in the islands (2,241 m) is also on Tahiti. [citation needed] The islands were formed as the Pacific Plate moved slowly west-northwest over a volcanic hotspot. The islands increase in age from east to west.
The scientific study of the materials used to create the Tahitian mourner's costume in the British Museum collection. Journal of Cultural Heritage.Volume 42. March–April 2020. Pages 263–269. B. A. L. Cranstone, H. J. Gowers.The Tahitian Mourner's Dress: A Discovery and a Description. The British Museum Quarterly. Volume 32. Number 3/4 ...