Festa da Anona

The idea of the Festa da Anona (Cherimoya Feast) was born in 1990, through a group of producers of Faial, that wanted to promote their products (fruit) and thus to call the attention the madeirenses in general.

Anona - Cherimoya

The initial idea was a Regional Cherimoya Exhibition, nowadays also known as the Anona Festival, … which is to be held at Faial (Santana), on the North Coast of Madeira Island. This is an exhibition specially dedicated to this fruit and its derivatives,…. such as liquors, puddings, ice creams and (beaten) drinks. The programme, with the participation of some hundreds of farm owners, … includes music and contests, … with a traditional Madeira flavor.

    The cherimoya (Annona cherimola) is a species of Annona. It is a deciduous or semi-evergreen shrub or small tree reaching 7 m tall. The flowers are produced in small clusters, each flower 2-3 cm across, with six petals, yellow-brown, often spotted purple at the base. The fruit is oval, often slightly oblique, 10-20 cm long and 7-10 cm diameter, with a smooth or slightly tuberculated skin. The fruit flesh is white, and has numerous seeds embedded in it. Mark Twain called the cherimoya “the most delicious fruit known to men.” Source: Wikipedia


Festa da Anona

Related page (most popular): Regional Festivities Calendar

Madeira Blue

Amazing pictures taken by Pedro Ferrão Patricio. Images of the underwater inhabitants of Madeira. (more…)

Who said this?

The isolation of these Islands makes their history and characteristics almost unknown to outsiders. Even those who come to visit see little beyond their first impressions.

This book is a discovery. It takes a modern look at the Island’s rich and individual history, many of the idiosyncrasies of which result from Madeira´s insularity.

It is also remarkable that one the authors is foreign. Through the culture of Europe this book traces the development of Madeira and pieces together the roots of present-day life.

I believe that all those who are interested in knowing Madeira better, or in making the Island known, will find this book a valuable instrument. I am thinking especially of the Madeiran communities in English-speaking countries.

Just as, through some photographs in this book, I relived times of my childhood (the holidays amidst the greenery of the Mount with the hammocks and toboggans going by) likewise other people will rediscover with fondness their own happy times.

Question: who said these words?

Tremoços (White Lupins) the Wonder Bean

I want Tremoços

White Lupins (Tremoços) is presented here in Madeira as an appetizer with having a beer at a bar (Taska) on the island.

White lupins (Lupinus Albus) belongs to the Fabaceae family and are traditionally grown in the Mediterranean countries. Australia is the largest producer in the world. The dry grain Lupine is toxic and contains a number of Alkaloids that has a bitter taste, and so these are only edible after boiling in water and salt.

On nutritional point of view, these yellow beans are almost the same level as a steak. It has three times more protein and two times more Phosphor than cow’s milk. White lupins are high in Fibre, vitamins B and E, Calcium, Potassium, Iron and Omega 3. Furthermore, the low starch content makes it an excellent ally in controlling the level of blood sugar and a good companion for low-fat diets. It has also healing properties to stimulate the renewal of skin cells. In short, it’s a real wonder bean!

Madeira by Jan Prehnal Baterka

We found another great (private) video about Madeira Island, filmed and edited by Jan Přehnal Baterka.

Short interview with Jan Přehnal Baterka:

Why the video?
“My big hobby is traveling and make videos. I made it for fun, for sharing with my friends without any support.”

What film equipment did you use?
“I use Panasonic GH1 + kit lens 14-140mm + Samyang 8mm 3/5, Nikkor 50mm 1/4 and tripod”

What editing software did you use?
“Software that I use: Adobe premier CS5, After effect CS5 + many plugins”

Madeira … Budding Beauty

by Barbara Radcliffe Rogers

Budding BeautyWith an everlasting bounty of blooms, Madeira is a perennial favorite

April is the time to be in Madeira, when the jacaranda and flame trees are in bloom and Funchal’s main street is canopied in purple blossoms. I first strolled under Funchal’s jacarandas on a cruise stop. That one day on the volcanic island that rises almost straight out of the Atlantic 559 miles off the coast of Portugal was a long time ago, but the memory of Madeira’s flowers never faded. So when SATA airlines began flying there from Boston, I headed back.

This time the jacarandas were covered in bright green leaves instead of purple blossoms, but they were about the only thing that wasn’t in bloom. Brilliant red platter-sized poinsettias peered over garden fences at eye level, passion flowers and lilies bloomed, and the camellias were just bursting forth. Bougainvillea cascaded from every balcony, and morning glories climbed the walls. Bird of paradise, honeysuckle, hibiscus and a dozen varieties of lily painted the landscape. I realized then that any month is the time to be in Madeira.

After drinking in the ocean view from the balcony of my room at Reid’s Palace Hotel, I stopped at the bar for the island’s most famous drink, a glass of amber Madeira wine. It was still a bit early in the day to sample Reid’s take on the martini, the Madeirini, which replaces the vermouth with local dry Madeira.

I began my garden tour by strolling through the hotel’s own 10-acre subtropical paradise, where trees from all over the world punctuate flowering shrubs and vines and native flowers. The scene has changed very little since Winston Churchill painted here and George Bernard Shaw perfected his tango on the lawns. I resisted the temptation to do either and headed into town.

Every tourist’s first stop is the Mercado dos Lavradores, a bustling Art Deco market designed by Portuguese architect Edmundo Tavares and — along with Oscar Niemeyer’s Casino Park Hotel — one of the island’s most important architectural works. In front of the market, women in traditional dress sell flowers.

The market sits in Funchal’s historic heart, where a surprising number of buildings have survived from its 15th- and 16th-century heyday as a sugar town. In sharp contrast to the market’s architecture, Santa Clara Convent and São Pedro Church recall Portugal’s golden age. Both are lined with azulejos, the glazed tiles so common in mainland Portugal, and the convent has a magnificent silver tabernacle. The 15th-century cathedral’s ceiling is inlaid with ivory and cedar.

Monte Palace Gardens

Madeira has a total of 14 public gardens, and I took a cable car to the biggest of them, the Monte Palace Tropical Garden. Here Portuguese businessman José Berardo has displayed his vast collection of decorative tiles from palaces, churches and private houses in a stunning garden. Alongside it an art-filled Japanese garden explores the long commercial and cultural relationship between Portugal and Japan.

Monte, the attractive village 1,800 feet above Funchal where the gardens are located, is known to generations of cruise-ship passengers for the ride into Funchal on wooden toboggans. These two-seater sleds originated in the 1850s as a way for Monte residents to descend more quickly into the city. The 10-minute ride through the winding cobbled streets reaches speeds of 30 mph, the sled guided by straw-hatted men whose thick-soled boots act as brakes.

It’s quite a contrast to the high-tech cable car I ascended on, but having passed up the ride before, I saw no reason to take it now and opted instead for another cable car. It links Monte to Funchal’s Botanical Gardens on a panoramic ride with views over the bay and the João Gomes River ravine, an area covered in a rare Laurissilva forest.

I’d seen only the capital of Funchal on my first trip, so until the ride to Monte I had little idea of what spectacular landscapes lay beyond it. Now I was hungry for more than a glimpse of the steep and soaring mountains that fill the rest of the island. Beyond the natural amphitheater in which Funchal nestles, mountains rise in deeply cut ridges to the island’s central peaks, over 6,000 feet in elevation.

This wild and ragged landscape is made even more dramatic by lakes and rushing rivers, rock outcrops and soaring cliffs that end abruptly at the sea. Most of the island is carpeted in subtropical greenery, 20 percent of it UNESCO World Heritage laurel forests now long extinct in mainland Europe. Where this land has been tamed, its steep slopes are covered in vineyards and terraced farms and orchards.

To irrigate it, in the early 1500s Madeira farmers began building waterways that bring water from mountain springs. More than 1,200 miles of these levadas carry water in nearly horizontal lines along the mountainsides, sometimes carved into cliff faces at dizzying heights. Alongside the levadas, their maintenance paths have become very popular walking trails.

The notion of exploring the inland mountains on these paths was irresistible, and I reached the first of them from a winding road that climbed out of the pretty fishing village of Camara de Lobos. The Levada do Norte led me through terraced farms into the valley of the Caixa River, and the two-hour walk whetted my appetite for more. So I signed on with Madeira Explorers to walk the Levada das 25 Fontes and discover the Risco Waterfall and a cliff from which 25 natural springs cascade into a lake.

I retired my weary legs to my hotel’s spa for the last day, where a new Reid’s Palace Signature Treatment uses locally produced aloe vera balsam and Madeira wine grape seed oil. Before dining on a locally sourced dinner of beef cubes rubbed in garlic and salt, skewered onto a bay leaf stick and wood-grilled, I sipped another local herb in the form of Reid’s Funchal Tonic. This gin and tonic perfumed with fresh fennel juice is inspired by Funchal’s name, which derives from the Portuguese word for the fennel that once covered the ground here.

By then I’d realized that I was still far short of seeing all 14 gardens but decided I didn’t really need to. With all the vineyards, banana plantations, herbs, laurel forests, wild flowers, overgrown balconies, dooryards and parks, the whole island was one big garden. I could eat and drink it as well as walk my way through it.

Global Traveler
January 2011

Porto Santo – Europe’s best hidden secret

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Walk: Fanal – Curral Falso – Ribeira da Janela

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A Shower of Light at Sea

Secret Madeira

Secret Madeira

Secret Madeira (logo), originally uploaded by Madeira.

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