About Me
I'm a Melbourne boy, hailing from St Kilda with one ex, one current wife and four kids. Love the outdoors and making new discoveries. I cook a lot at home (cheers from wife) and do some preserving, mostly jams, pickles and fruit liqueurs. This is the diary of a cooking journey.

My Complete Profile

Recent Posts
What's In A Name?
In A Bad Place
Marinara Sauce
Pantry Moth Allsorts
A Short Holiday
Leftover Surprise
Nose To Tail
Celeriac Salad
Delayed Takeoff
Praise For The Most Part

Links
1001 Dinners 1001 Nights
A Few of My Favourite Things
Abstract Gourmet
Apellation Australia
Becks and Posh
BurgerMary ATX
Cook (almost) Anything at least once
Cooking Down Under
Cook sister!
Cooked And Bottled In Brunswick
David Lebovitz
Deep Dish Dreams
Chef Paz
Chubby Hubby
Eating Melbourne
Eating With Jack
essjay eats
Food Lover's Journey
Gosstronomy
Grab Your Fork
I Am Obsessed With Food
I Eat Therefore I Am
Iron Chef Shellie
Just Desserts
Kalyn's Kitchen
Kitchen Wench
Lobstersquad
Matt Bites
Melbourne Gastronome
My Kitchen in Half Cups
Nola Cuisine
Not Quite Nigella
Nourish Me
Seriously Good
Souvlaki For The Soul
Stone Soup
Sunnybrae
Syrup and Tang
Steve Don't Eat It!
That Jess Ho
The Elegant Sufficiency
The Perfect Pantry
The View From My Porch
Thyme for Cooking
Tomato
Tumeric & Saffron
tummy rumbles
What I Cooked Last Night
where's the beef
WhiteTrashBBQ
Vicious Ange

Food Blog Resources
Food Blog S'cool
I Eat I Drink I Work
Kiplog Food Links

Food for Thought
Autism Victoria
Autism Vox
forget me now
Lotus Martinis
MOM - Not Otherwise Specified
St Kilda Today

Tuesday, November 14, 2006
Weekend Herb Blogging
This time of the year, the asparagus crop is in full swing. I recall about six months ago that Kevin from Seriously Good ran a month long asparagus recipe feature that had me absolutely drooling and somewhat envious as asparagus was out of season here. Well now it's my turn and what better vegetable to feature for weekend herb blogging which this month is being hosted by Nandita of Saffron Trail.

At a time when I still had plenty of hair, some twenty-five years ago, I used to visit an Italian hairdresser who looked after it. She was about the same age as me and did some pretty wild things with her hair, all sorts of different cuts and amazing colours, until the day she finally ran out of hair to mess about with.

My hairdresser came from the family farm at KooWee Rup on the top of Western Port, which is on the edge of what was formerly known as the Great Swamp that stretched out through Gippsland until the late 1800’s, when an Italian engineer, Carlo Catani, was employed to dig drainage channels which transformed the area into prime farmland.

Koo Wee Rup originally gained fame as a potato growing district and a potato festival is held in March every year to celebrate the relationship between the town and this mainstay vegetable, but since the 1930’s Koo Wee Rup’s main claim to fame is that it is the centre of Victoria’s and Australia’s asparagus growing industry, that thrive in the rich soils of this former swampland.

My hairdresser may have been a wild at heart, but she came from good Italian stock and we always talked about food and during the asparagus season she would tell me how to prepare asparagus and all the ways she and her family ate this wonderful shoot.

Asparagus is a member of the lily family and as such is related to onions, garlic, leeks and turnips. The part we eat is the young shoot that is sent up from the crown (bulb) each year in early spring, which, when eventually left alone, will form feathery fronds, properly known as phylloclades, that is, delicate branches without leaves.

At the time we were talking about asparagus, the usual method of preparation was to peel back a bit of the tough outer skin from the base and boil it. To this end there were special asparagus pots, tall and narrow in diameter to accommodate it. What my hairdresser told me was that her family simply grabbed a stem at both ends and simply bent it until it snapped. What you were left with was two halves, one to be discarded and the other perfectly tender its whole length. They then liked to fry the stems in butter or olive oil, which at the time was a revelation as it concentrated the flavour, not leaching it out into cooking water.

Nowadays, all television chefs will show you how to bend and snap asparagus, but think about it for a moment. Why would asparagus snap at exactly the point where tender meets tough? If you pick up the stalk to be discarded and eat a little of it from where the break is, you will discover that it’s not so tough, especially if it breaks about half way. The really tough part of the stem occurs near where the stem changes colour from green to white.

Imagine for a minute that you work on an asparagus farm. All day long you have had a bent back as you harvested the vegetable and the last thing you want to do is muck around peeling it. After all, you do have tons of the stuff, so a little bit wasted is of no concern.

If on the other hand you are buying asparagus, you want to get all the value possible from it and really these days with water issues and such like, who wants to waste anything? You might like to try this. Lay all the stalks on your chopping board and with a sharp knife cut through the stalks into the green part just above the white. Then get a trusty vegetable peeler and peel back the skin for 5 cm from where you cut. What you might find is that suddenly a little bit of asparagus goes a whole lot further.

Our favourite way to cook asparagus is simple and delicious. Take the prepared stems and coat them with olive oil and a little salt. Heat a ridged grill pan till smoking hot, place the asparagus on it and turn when the grill marks appear and darken. Repeat on the other side and serve.
 
  posted at 8:28 am
  5 comments



5 Comments:
At 11:35 am, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Thank you for excellent research ( I trust you here). I love the hair dresser story.
Your logic is flawless as it your asparagus in the grill pan.
Be grateful you don't have to be a full time baker...they start about midnight. I would find it a joy to make croissants with a daughter!!! Always felt I missed not having a daughter. But then I never had to worry about her going off on a date either.

 
At 12:36 pm, Blogger Kalyn Denny said...

Your asparagus method sounds great to me. I always feel bad about wasting it, even when it's spring and it's relatively cheap here. I have a friend who saves the tough stems and makes a kind of asparagus "stock" then she puts in just a bit of the good end, some cream, and a few spices and makes a wonderful soup.

Extra credit for getting your WHB post in so early too!

 
At 5:53 pm, Blogger neil said...

Hi tanna, I'm pretty sure everything is okay here this time! My daughter is pretty excited about the croissants, I just have to get her started the day before. Know what you mean about the date thing.

Hi kalyn, I've been snapping for such a long time before I thought about the waste. Sometimes you can get them to snap without too much waste, other times an awful lot seems to go in the bin. I'll take that credit too and save it for a rainy day!

 
At 8:41 pm, Blogger Katie said...

I quit snapping a few years ago - when I saw mon mari eating all the 'end pieces'. We only get white or purple asparagus here and that has to be peeled anyway. Great article - I'm so jealous that your asparagus season is just starting...I won't see it for months!

 
At 3:01 pm, Blogger neil said...

Hi katie, a fellow trimmer, nice to meet you. Don't worry, I was sooo jealous when it was your turn!

 

Post a Comment

<< Home



Search


Recipe Categories
Soups
Salads
Vegetables
Poultry
Pork
Beef
Cakes & Desserts
Miscellaneous

Archives
November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
August 2008
September 2008
October 2008
November 2008
December 2008
January 2009
February 2009
March 2009
May 2009
June 2009
September 2009
October 2009
November 2009
December 2009
January 2010
February 2010
March 2010
April 2010
May 2010
June 2010
July 2010
August 2010
September 2010
October 2010
November 2010
December 2010
February 2011
March 2011
April 2011
May 2011
June 2011
July 2011
August 2011
September 2011
July 2012

Miscellaneous
AUSTRALIAN FOOD BLOGGERS
Prev ~ List ~ Random ~ Join ~ Next
Site Ring from Bravenet


Site Feed

counter easy hit

Credits
Blog Design by:


Image created by:
Ximena Maier

Powered by:


Photos, Original Recipes, and Text - (C) Copyright: 2005-2010
At My Table by Neil Murray, all rights reserved.
You may re-post a recipe, please give credit and post a link to this site.

Contact Me
Neil Murray

Follow messytable on Twitter