.. I really like spring … ahhh the spring showers and the
hay fever season not!! But wait, here come the really delicious, flavoursome,
and attractive fruits and vegetables that mark the passing of the boring brassicas of winter. The best of
the best right now are asparagus, strawberries and rhubarb.
St George’s day on the 23rd of April marks the official
start of the asparagus season, and after a couple of weeks they are at their juicy
best, bursting with antioxidants, vitamins and minerals, all just waiting to be
smothered in a rich buttery lemony (or try blood orange for a fantastic
alternative) béarnaise sauce. The Romans
were so fond of asparagus that they carried it from the coastal areas where it
grew to high up in the alps to freeze it so that they could have it at their various
feasts throughout the year …. that’s one very very long trip to the refrigerator isn’t
it.
Wild strawberries have been consumed by humans and animals
since forever, but it actually wasn't until the late 18th century
that the modern garden strawberry was first bred and grown in France. Despite giving this gift to the world, today France
doesn’t even figure in the top 10 strawberry producing nations. The top honour
goes to the USA who produce 4 times as much number 2 (Turkey since you ask, yes you did I heard you) and
over 25% of the entire strawberry production in the world.
And finally we come to rhubarb. If your rhubarb has been grown in what’s known as the “Rhubarb Triangle” in West Yorkshire then it will also have the EU Protected Designation of Origin classification, a status that it shares with 41 other British foodstuffs, like Cornish pasties and Melton Mowbray pork pies, as well European cousins like Champagne, Burgundy, and Parmigiano-Reggiano (that’s Parmesan cheese to us non cheesemonger types). I took my rhubarb as a filling in a sweet little cake form today … yum yum yum … I had several as they were little and this was research after all ...
And finally we come to rhubarb. If your rhubarb has been grown in what’s known as the “Rhubarb Triangle” in West Yorkshire then it will also have the EU Protected Designation of Origin classification, a status that it shares with 41 other British foodstuffs, like Cornish pasties and Melton Mowbray pork pies, as well European cousins like Champagne, Burgundy, and Parmigiano-Reggiano (that’s Parmesan cheese to us non cheesemonger types). I took my rhubarb as a filling in a sweet little cake form today … yum yum yum … I had several as they were little and this was research after all ...
Oh I almost forget … rhubarb is high in vitamin K which is
widely believed to help in delaying or even preventing the onset of Alzheimer’s
disease.
3 comments:
I'll take the strawberries.
When I was a kid, my grandmother had a big garden and she grew rhubarb and I loved it. I don't see it that much any more and I certainly didn't know about the vitamin K effect. I'll have to search some out. Or, maybe I should just find a pie shop with some rhubarb pie. That sounds yummy.
Strawberries for me. I've never had asparagus. Rhubarb, I find, isn't that tasty.
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