Asparagus has been used from very early times as a vegetable and medicine, owing to its delicate flavour and diuretic properties. There is a recipe for cooking asparagus in the oldest surviving book of recipes, Apicius’s third century AD De re coquinaria, Book III. It is said that it was cultivated by the ancient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans, who ate it fresh when in season and dried the vegetable for use in winter.It lost its popularity in the Middle Ages but returned to favour in the seventeenth century.
Facts:
Season: They are at their best March~June in the Northern Hemisphere, but can be obtained all year round thanks to state-of-the-art greenhouse cultivation.
Beneficial elements: Carotene, Vitamin C and E, Vitmanins from the B group, Rutin, Vegetal fibers, Folic Acid, Potassium. The amino acid asparagine gets its name from the plant.
Asparagus rhizomes and root are used ethnomedically to treat urinary tract infections, as well as kidney and bladder stones.
Asparagus is also believed to have aphrodisiac properties (this belief is at least partially due to the phallic shape of the shoots).
Tips:
-Choose asparaguses with a clean cutting surface. No black spots should appear.
-The darker the colour, the better. As for white asparaguses, choses with a “wet cutting”
-When storing your asparaguses in the fridge, have them stand upright in a long narrow container with their foot wrapped in wet kitchen paper. Discard bent asparaguses on the supermarket stands.
-Choose green asparaguses with the smallest possible foliage along the stems and dark tips.
-When boiling them, either boil them stading upright inside a pasta mesh container, or absolutely flat in a sauce pan. Do not bend them.
-Asparaguses are best digested when lightly fried with oil.
-If Asparaguses cannot be obtained directly from the farmer, lightly peel but keep yop half as it is to preserve Vitamins.
Varieties:
Most popular varieties are shown in the picture above: White, Green and “wild-style” (apeelations vary!)
Asparaguses are abundant in the while, but they grow very quickly and get too hard for consumption.
The wild ones picked in their natural environment are my favourite as I fondly rememebr picking them up as a soldier in the South of France during our drills and cooking them in simple omelettes!
Violet asparaguse are very popular in any restaurants!
Mini-asparaguses are ever so popular in Japan thanks to their practical size.
Recipes are endless, but my favourite is the large green asparaguses and mozzarella gratin as prepared and served at Uzu Izakaya in Shizuoka City!
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Very beautiful and they look delicious.
Daneen
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Dear Daneen!
Greetings!
Thank you so much for our compliments!
Cheers,
Robert-Gilles
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This is an excellent post — Thanks so much for the information!
Shelly, Nibbles of Tidbits
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Dear Shelly!
Greetings!
You are most welcome!
Cheers,
Robert-gilles
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I find the mini or should I say young asparagus stalks smoother to be eaten. The bulky ones have more fiber in them. Thanks for sharing this Eric. 🙂
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Dear Criz!
Greetings!
Actually, themini-ones are a different variety developed in japan!
Cheers,
Robert-gilles
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Correct me if I am wrong but isn’t asparagus one of the very few vegetables that can be harvested year after year from the same plant?
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It should be bexause as far as I know, they grow again in the same place in the wild!
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Brilliant.
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Cheers, Eric!
R-G.
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