Essential Information & explanations, latest texts & monographs on
Asparagus.
Stalking the Wild Asparagus by Euell Gibbons
Stalking the Wild Asparagus by Euell Gibbons
The Mighty Asparagus by Vladimir Radunsky
The Asparagus Festival Cookbook by Jan Moore
Asparagus All Ways Always by Stockton Asparagus Festival Staff
The Asparagus Festival Cookbook by Jan Moore
Cabbages and Kings by Elizabeth Seabrook
Grow the Best Asparagus, No 63 by Gardenway Editors
From Asparagus to Zucchini: A Guide to Cooking With Farm-Fresh Produce by Madison Area Community Supported Agriculture Coalition
Asparagus by Nancy Hewitt
Life, Love and Asparagus by Marilyn M. Hardigree
Asparagus, Asparagus, Ah Sweet Asparagus by Faye Kicknosway
Stalking Wild Asparagus by Euell Gibbons
The Asparagus Feast by Sheldon P. Zitner
Asparagus: All Ways . . . Always by Stockton Asparagus Festival
Asparagus
Asparagus is the name of a vegetable obtained from one species within the genus Asparagus, specifically the young shoots of Asparagus officinalis. It has been used from very early times as a culinary vegetable, owing to its delicate flavour and diuretic properties. There is a recipe for cooking asparagus in the oldest surviving book of recipes, Apicius's 3rd century CE De re coquinaria, Book III.
In their simplest form, the shoots are boiled or steamed until tender and served with a light sauce like hollandaise or melted butter or a drizzle of olive oil with a dusting of Parmesan cheese. A refinement is to tie the shoots into sheaves and stand them so that the lower part of the stalks are boiled, while the tenderer heads are steamed. Tall cylindrical asparagus cooking pots have liners with handles and perforated bases to make this process foolproof.
Unlike most vegetables, where the smaller and thinner are the more tender, thick asparagus stalks have more tender volume to the proportion of skin. When asparagus have been too long in the market, the cut ends will have dried and gone slightly concave. The best asparagus are picked and washed while the water comes to the boil. Fastidious cooks scrape asparagus stalks with a vegetable peeler, stroking away from the head, and refresh them in ice-cold water before steaming them. Small or full-sized stalks can be made into asparagus soup. Cantonese restaurants in the United States often serve asparagus stir-fried with chicken, shrimp, or beef.
One problem with asparagus is that a constituent of the plant is metabolised and excreted in the urine, giving it a distinctive, mildly unpleasant odour. Apparently not everyone who eats asparagus produces the odor, but also not everyone is able to smell the odor once it is produced. [1]
The amino acid asparagine gets its name from asparagus, the asparagus plant being rich in this compound.
Asparagus as a vegetable is widely grown around villages near Evesham in the Vale of Evesham in Worcestershire, England, and the plant grows wild on England's south coast. Indeed in Evesham it is still known by some by its original local name of Sparrow Grass.
External links
The shoots of a related plant, Ornithogalum pyrenaicum, called Prussian asparagus, have been used for similar purposes as genuine asparagus.
Many unrelated plants are called "asparagus" or "used as asparagus" when their shoots are used in a similar way.
The above article is adapted from from Wikipedia All Wikipedia article text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License
Recent related patents from USPTO: 6730826: Plant trichome gland specific promoter sequence
6727206: Substituted aryl ketones
6723897: Methods for controlling gibberellin levels
6723895: Plants containing a cytosolic acetyl CoA-carboxylase nucleic acid
6723837: Nucleic acid molecule and encoded protein associated with sterol synthesis and metabolism
6723720: Pesticidal triazine-derivatives
6720478: RAD51-like polynucleotide and uses thereof
6716832: Arylphenyl-substituted cyclic ketoenols
6716474: Expression of fructose 1,6 bisphosphate aldolase in transgenic plants
6713665: Maize NPR1 promoter and methods of use in plant gene expression
6713663: Flowering locus T (FT) and genetically modified plants having delayed flower development
6713436: 1-cycloalkylpyrazolyl-benzoyl derivatives
6713100: Confectionery product comprising vegetables solids
6713063: Broad-spectrum .delta.-endotoxins
6709660: Meningococcal antigens
6706952: Arabidopsis gene encoding a protein involved in the regulation of SAR gene expression in plants
6706950: Nucleic acid sequences encoding .beta.-ketoacyl-ACP synthase and uses thereof
6706949: RuvB orthologues and uses thereof
6706948: Sugarcane UBI9 gene promoter and methods of use thereof
6706866: Plant having altered environmental stress tolerance
6706860: Toxins
6703240: Modified starch metabolism enzymes and encoding genes for improvement and optimization of plant phenotypes
6699818: Trifluoromethylpyrrole carboxamides and trifluoromethylpyrrolethioamides as fungicides
6696623: Method of increasing growth and yield in plants
6696560: Retinoblastoma-like RRB gene of arabidopsis thaliana
6695605: Forming station with a compartmentalized chute
6693228: Alteration of flowering time in plants
6693092: Arylphenyl-substituted cyclic ketoenols
6689776: Fungicidal combinations
6689773: Uracil substituted phenyl sulfamoyl carboxamides
6689398: Triterpene compositions and methods for use thereof
6689392: Methods and compositions for controlling plant pathogen
6686516: Expression of trehalose 6-phosphate synthase in plant plastids
6686515: Homologous recombination in plants
6686513: Sugarcane ubi9 gene promoter sequence and methods of use thereof
6686478: Thienylsulphonylamino(thio)carbonyl compounds
6686469: Pesticidal pyrimidine-derivatives
6686452: Bacillus thuringiensis CryET29 compositions toxic to coleopteran insects and ctenocephalides SPP
6686318: Heterocyclically substituted aromatic amino compounds with a herbicidal effect
6685973: Method for inhibiting 15-lipoxygenase with fermented Glycine max (L.) extract
6684605: Modified atmosphere packaging for a floral grouping
6683211: Phenyl-propargylether derivatives
6682918: Bacterial sucrose synthase compositions and methods of use
6682763: Skin-beautifying agent, anti-aging agent for the skin, whitening agent and external agent for the skin
6680092: Coating method and products obtained by same
6677503: Sunflower anti-pathogene proteins and genes and their uses
6677442: Nucleic acid encoding human REV1 protein
6677277: Substituted sulphonyl amino(thio)carbonyl compounds and their use as herbicides
6670488: Substituted phenylketoenols
Bibliographic Resources
Updates and comments at Essential Facts blog
Are you interested in Feng Shui?
Price Theory Resources
World Class Photographers
Some philosophical movements
Top PDF and eBook Downloads
|
|
Interesting Links
Sports
Kitchen Knowledge
Hollywood Icons
Mythology
Philosophy
Politics
Retirement
Accounting & Finance
Automobiles
Marketing
Psychology
Academic Subjects
Ancient Greeks
Art & Design
Biology
Biology & Biologists
California
Cats & Dogs
Ethics
Legal Topics
Logic
The Greats
Architectural Dates & Places
* Mathematics & Mathematicians
Medical Update d06
More
Chromosomes and Genomics
Enginering Systems 1
Investments
Transportation
Mathematics
Brilliant Mathematicians
Classic Authors
Fear No Exams
Nexus
Characters & countries
Computers + 2
Science Plus
Science & Computers
Quantum Theory
Home, Site-Map
|