Monday, May 30, 2011
Sticky Sticks
In our vegetable box last week we got some Skorzonerrødder which we generally just call sticky sticks. They are muddy roots which you peel and eat like most root vegetables - boiled or roasted. When you peel the dirty brown outside off, they are white-ish inside but secrete some sort of sticky stuff which you can't seem to wash off your hands so you need to wear gloves when you are preparing them.
I think they are supposed to be a poor mans asparagus, but I think that is doing them an injustice as they are really nice on their own, sort of like a parsnip but with a subtle asparagussy flavour.
So far, I can't find an english name for them - does anyone know what they are called?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Apparantly the plant is
ReplyDeletecalled "viper's grass" but the roots should be called "scorzonera". Can anybody confirm this?
/L
I thought that they were "invisible sticky parsnips", but I'm probably wrong, I usually am.
ReplyDeleteSkinny sugar beet?
m
They're visible now.
ReplyDeleteNothing like parsnips, or beet.
m
Salsify - pronounced salsiffy - is what it is called in English. Part of the sunflower family along with "goatsbeard" a wildflower I've seen in England. You are eating the young roots.
ReplyDeletewrm
Google translate confirms Salsify
ReplyDeletemy explanation gucci replica handbags This Site Dolabuy Dior linked here Dior Dolabuy
ReplyDelete