Poi is made from taro

Taro = inhames

Inhames are native to the Azores, and there are actually a number of different 
varieties found in the islands.

Whereas in Hawaii the traditional way to eat taro is to make a paste with it, 
in the Azores, inhames are usually boiled and salted and eaten that way (you 
can also fry slices of the boiled inhame until it's crispy on the outside).  I 
grew up eating inhames, and I loved poi, but didn't connect the two until a few 
years ago.

________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Cheri 
Mello <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, May 27, 2019 12:36 PM
To: Azores Genealogy
Subject: [AZORES-Genealogy] Gomes from Flores and Martin from Pico; To Hawaii 
and California

[EXTERNAL SENDER]
Repost for Dixie Schafir,  dschafir at 
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 (which is the registered email to this list - the alternative that she 
provides does not type out the "at" so it is obscured by the Google Group 
List-serv).

I tried to change my Email address as I have a new one: it is 
[email protected]

My grandmother’s family name is Coelho:  They came from Flores. They owned 
Sulphur Springs in Hayward, CA. The women  used to do their laundry in the 
creek, and hang their clothes on the bushes to dry.
They came around Cape Horn by sail, via Hawaii.
I still have Portuguese relatives on Oahu. That is why so many of our people 
had Elephant Ears growing in their yards - they are poi plants.  I guess they 
came to CA that way because of the winds.
Some of my relatives on Oahu owned Dutch Boy Paint for years, maybe still do.

When they came to CA the debarked at Alviso landing and walked to what became 
Hayward.

My Grandfather’s family name is Martin and came from Pico around  Cape Horn. 
They landed in Yerba Buena, which became San Francisco. They found SF so 
lawless they migrated across the Bay to ranch. Their ranch is now part of 
Turtle Rock Ranch State Park over by Mt Diablo. They moved on when their house 
was destroyed in a earthquake.
My grandfather Anthony Martin was Hayward’s blacksmith and wheelwright for 
years. His place of business was on A Street. His house was across the Street 
from All Saints. He was a extraordinarily strong, and like most Victorians 
skilled at many tasks. He put the copper dome on the Old Hayward Library (now 
demolished) He also took his blacksmith rig out to Crow Canyon when they were 
grading the road through there and changed out the Mule’s shoes. When pulling 
the graders the mules  would go through 2 pair of shoes a day. I once saw him 
change horseshoes on a horse when he was in his 70’s. He was unbelievably fast!
Grandfather Martin was such a staunch supporter of the Church the Pope sent him 
a Certificate praising him and offering perpetual blessings. He once went back 
to Spain to fetch a new priest for the congregation. There was some sort of 
Civil War raging and hechad to roe in from the ship to get the priest. They had 
a rough time of it to keep from drowning.
He and the priest would go down to Santa Cruz and fish all day with Mr Stagnaro 
while the family would camp on the beach in front of what is now Penny Arcade. 
Grants would stand on the gunwhales, cigar clamped in his teeth, and fish all 
morning that way.


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