According to Hoofer, the Lotus mentioned by Homer, which peoples of the African coast and the first inhabitants of Sicily used to eat, was nothing but carob. For the great Greek poet carobs were the most precious food for Louts Eaters which used to eat only rough acorns. Clemente Grimaldi in 1895, in its treaty on carob tree wrote: “ I wonder if those countless square cavities, dug by the man’s hand on the sides of hard rocks, in the long valley of Ispica, between Spaccaforno and Modica, are the signs of a primitive settlement chosen for the advantage offered by so abundant and prosperous a tree present in that area.”
But apart from literary and legendary influences the carob tree has been thriving in the Hyblaean area, like in African countries; it is a kind of vegetation that grows very well in calcareous and volcanic lands. The carob tree, which the botanists call “ceratonia siliqua” was called “ceration” by the Greeks and “siliqua” by the Latin people, which means pod. In Sicily it was usually called “carrua”, up to the present term “Carrubo”, indicating with the same name both the fruit and the tree. This tree is the natural element which completes the Hyblaean country ; its fruit is used to produce saccharose , fodder and syrups. From the seeds we obtain a very good flour, used in different ways, to produce preservatives and in the tan industry. Industrious bees carry the pollen from flower to flower: a continuous work that produces the precious carob honey.To Discover the real Sicily please visit GreenSicily.com
