Home
Recipes
Software
Store
Discuss Food!
Video
Help
Log in
and post recipes free!
find
in
Anywhere
Recipe Title
Videos
Discussion Groups
Food Dictionary
Product Support
search
Parsnips -- Information
1 servings
Try this Parsnips -- Information recipe, or post your own recipe for Parsnips -- Information
tell us
Be the first to
submit a photo
for this recipe.
Win $100.00
by posting the best original food photo this month!
Recipe look good to you?
Parsnips -- Information Ingredients
3/4 c Chopped parsnip
Instructions for Parsnips -- Information
The parsnip is a humble root that has endured for centuries. Europeans brought the parsnip to the United States in the early 1600s, but this creamy-white root has never become an American favorite. Now, these old-fashioned vegetables have gained renewed favor because theyre a good source of complex carbohydrates and contain little fat and no cholesterol. Parsnips can be described as off-white carrot look-alikes. The variety we are familiar with was developed in the Middle Ages, according to "On Food and Cooking" by Harold McGee. Availability: Fresh parsnips are available year-round, with the peak times being fall and winter. Selection and storage: Look for small to medium, well-shaped parsnips; larger ones can be woody inside. Avoid limp or shriveled parsnips and ones with bruises or cuts. Parsnips can be refrigerated in a plastic bag for up to two weeks. But dont store them near apples, pears, and other fruits because the ethylene gas produced from these fruits can make parsnips bitter, say Kathleen Mayes and Sandra Gottfried in "Roots: A Vegetarian Bounty." Preparation: Parsnips have a sweet flavor and, because they are root vegetables, an earthy character. They can be used just as you would use carrots and are suitable for almost any method of cooking, including baking, boiling, and steaming. The traditional preparation is to boil, butter, and mash them. They are a favorite ingredient in broths, stocks, and stews, but also combine well with greens and other root vegetables. Parsnips make a good side dish for almost any type of meat. Brown them in butter to surround a roast, or try them roasted or grilled. For a different taste, chop and saute parsnips with chopped tart apples. Parsnips turn mushy when overcooked, so add them to soups, stews, and sautes near the end of cooking time, Sharon Tyler Herbst advises in "The Food Lovers Tiptionary." Nutritional highlights: 1/2 cup cooked parsnip or 3/4 cup raw parsnip* contains 63 calories, less than one gram of fat. They are a good source of complex carbohydrates and potassium and a fair source of calcium. Parsnips also contain small amounts of iron and vitamin C. *1/2 cup parsnip 42.4 cals, 3.4%cff, (0.2g fat), 10.2g carbs, (2.8g fiber), 0.7g protein; 6mg sodium -- Analysis by MasterCook3. Recipe by: By Carol J. G. Ward for Knight-Rider 2/99 Posted to EAT-LF Digest by PatHanneman
on Feb 12, 1999, converted by MM_Buster v2.0l.
Main Ingredient:
Cuisine:
Uncategorized
More like this...
White Sauce Variations - Information
Peppercorn Information Pt 1
Peppercorn Information Pt 2
Peppercorn Information Pt 3
Potato Information
Ingredient Insight - look inside this recipe
Vegetables
Tips
for
flavor
and
categorization
Recent searches:
lemon pie filling cool whip
berry crisp
buttercream mocha
rose sauce
beef joint
bacon wrap
sauce butter pineapple
chicken grilled
baba ghanoush
allspice cookies
valentines day
fluted flan tin
chicken stock broccoli rabe pasta
house italian dressing
pineapple jam
chicken cream chop
chocoholics
gumbo justin wilson
chicken peeking
stronganoff
O P T I O N S
Rate or Comment
Suggest to Friend
Add to Menu
Email Recipe
Print Recipe
I M P R O V E
Submit Photo
Link to Recipe
Post a Recipe
Invite Friends
Post a Video
R E M E M B E R
Try Soon
Favorite
G R O U P S
log in first
Create your own personal cookbook!
Learn more
Download
our cooking software and
do more
with this recipe!
BigOven for Windows won Best Cooking Software, 2008 from TopTenReviews.com