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Rhubarb
is a relative of buckwheat and has an earthy, sour flavor. Rhubarb
thrives in cold climates and originated in Western China, Tibet,
Mongolia, Siberia and neighboring areas. The traditional role
was medicinal-the dried root was a popular remedy for a wide range
of illnesses. Its primary function was to induce vomiting, although
rhubarb is also a mild astringent. This medicinal role caused
the price of the dried root to rise. In 1542, rhubarb sold for
ten times the price of cinnamon in France and in 1657 rhubarb
sold for over twice the price of opium in England (Schneider,
2001). Beginning in the eighteenth century, rhubarb began to be
consumed in foods, primarily drinks and meat stews.
Botanically
speaking, rhubarb is considered a vegetable, but it's most often
treated as a fruit — though it's rarely eaten raw. Just like fresh
cranberries, rhubarb is almost unbearably tart on its own and
needs the sweetness of sugar, honey, or fruit juice added to it
to balance out the acidity. Rhubarb's nickname is the "pie
plant" because that is the primary use for this vegetable.
Rhubarb
was introduced to the United States at the end of the eighteenth
century. Today most rhubarb is frozen for commercial and institutional
use; only about a quarter of the crop is sold fresh.
Rhubarb
- Selection:
Hothouse, or strawberry, rhubarb appears in markets as early as
January and continues to be stocked through April. Field-grown,
or cherry, rhubarb begins to arrive in markets in March and can
continue to arrive through the summer (depending on the area where
it is grown). Spring stalks are the juiciest and most-tender.
Fresh
stalks are flat, not curled or limp. When stalks that have been
pulled-not cut-from the field are available; choose them. Pulled
stalks dry out less rapidly. Size is no indicator of tenderness.
Deep red stalks are sweeter and richer.
Rhubarb
- Storage:
Wrap
rhubarb in plastic wrap and store it in the coldest part of the
refrigerator for up to one week. Cooked and raw rhubarb both freeze
well.
Rhubarb
- Preparation:
Cut off and discard and leaves (see warning). Rinse and trim from
base and tip. You may peel or cut with the skin intact. Remember
to cook only in non-aluminum pots only due to the acidic nature
of rhubarb.
Rhubarb
- WARNING:
Never eat rhubarb leaves, cooked or raw. Eating the leaves can
be poisonous because they contain oxalate. This toxin, plus another
unknown toxin also found in the leaves, has been reported to cause
poisoning when large quantities of raw or cooked leaves are ingested.
Rhubarb
- Varieties:
Red
stalk types: Crimson (may also be called Crimson Cherry, Crimson
Red, or Crimson Wine). It produces brightly colored red stalks
with the unique characteristic of being red throughout under normal
temperature and moisture conditions of the Pacific Northwest.
Other vigorous red varieties are Valentine and Cherry Red (Cherry,
Early Cherry), producing long, thick, deep-red stalks.
Rhubarb
- Speckled
types (pink): Victoria produces large stalks of excellent quality,
long, round with smooth ribs. It develops pink speckling on a
light green stalk with the pink color being more intense at the
bottom of the stalk, fading to a solid green near the top. Victoria
is commonly used for forcing.
Strawberry
is very similar to Victoria, and may be the same variety. MacDonald
is another "pink" type that produces well.
German Wine is similar to Victoria but slightly more vigorous
and more intense in color, typically with a darker pink speckling
on a green stem.
Rhubarb
- Green
varieties:
Riverside Giant, a cold-hardy, vigorous producer with large diameter,
long, green stalks.
Rhubarb
- Tips:
- Add
rhubarb to your favorite pie or fruit bread.
-
Add cooked rhubarb into a fruit topping for poultry.
-
Top frozen yogurt with berries and rhubarb-adds a twist!

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