Summer Food – Kūmara

Te Puna

Atua: Pani Tinaku.

Pani Tinaku

Whakapapa

Te whakapapa o Pani Tinaku.

Pani Tinaku - Whakapapa (PDF, 36 KB)

Pūrākau

Tūmatauenga rāua ko Rongomaraeroa

A Tūmatauenga rāua ko Rongomaraeroa (PDF, 37 KB)

Waiata

Pōpō

Composed by Enoka Te Pakaru, Te Aitanga-a-Māhaki.

http://hana.co.nz/online/ko-wai/ 

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Karakia

Maie te Tupua

A karakia from Waikato for lifting kūmara crops[1].

"Maie te tupua, maie te taniwha

I haere mai koe i whea?

I a Whakaotinuku, i a Whakaotirangi

Ko tō manawa, ko taku manawa

E Tāne ka irihia

Whanowhano, haramai te toki

Haumi e!

Hui e!

Taiki e!"

Whakataukī

Iti noa ana, he pito mata. 

He Atua! He Kōrero!

Pani Tinaku

Pani Tinaku - Māui Wharekino

Te Ara has a wealth of information on Pani and her progeny, the kūmara, in both English and Māori.

http://www.teara.govt.nz/mi/kūmara/page-1

Tūmatauenga rāua ko Rongomaraeroa

What you need

A Tūmatauenga rāua ko Rongomaraeroa (PDF, 37 KB)

What you do

–   What is this pūrākau about?

–   What does it describe the origins of? (E.g. first taiaha; kūmara; karakia and ritual about the kūmara.)

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Pōpō 

Pōpō

Ko Wai is a teacher’s resource based on four tribal anthems, including Enoka Te Pakaru’s iconic Pōpō!

The oriori is produced in audio visual format which you can share with students and the support material is organised by levels.

Explore the resource here:

http://hana.co.nz/online/ko-wai/ 

Ako ā-Kākā

Rote learn the first three stanzas of Pōpō! 

Maie te Tupua

Ako ā-Kākā

Maie te Tipua

Learn the karakia Maie te Tupua. This can be recited when planting and harvesting, and as a karakia to the gods, in general. It can also be used as a tauparapara, or to begin and end any type of hui. 

Iti noa ana, he pito mata 

A small tuber can be used as a seed kūmara, to sprout and produce many more kūmara next planting season. This whakataukī refers to the wisdom in making a small investment now in the hope of plentiful return in the future.

– a monetary investment

–   a physical one e.g. training every morning to get into a sports team

–   learning something new

Iti noa ana, he pito mata

–   a new friendship.

Possible Assessment Opportunities

Students can:

Delicious Kūmara

Sprouting Kūmara

Sprout some kūmara in the class, and see how far they grow and creep. Create and experiment and see if growth rate differs when growing kūmara in different liquids.

Visit Kaipara Kūmara’s website:

https://www.kumara.co.nz/general-1-1

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What you need

What you do

–  measuring growth

–  sketching or photographing plant

–  comment on appearance

–  where the kūmara was situated for the period e.g. windowsill; part shade; all day sun.

Note

Roroi

Roroi

Roroi is the original Māori dessert! Make it with freshly harvested kūmara – the fresher the better.
This recipe suggests adding sugar, although if your kūmara are sweet enough you won’t need it – our tūpuna didn’t! 

What you need

What you do

Note

This book contains a number of recipes for kūmara:
Te Kūmara – kātahi nā te kai reka! (item number 11024). 

Possible Assessment Opportunities

Students can:

[1] Māori Agriculture, Best. E.
http://nzetc.victoria.ac.nz/tm/scholarly/tei-BesAgri-t1-body-d4-d11.html