E 260 E249 E250 E252 E330 E407 E410 E412 E414 E415 E621 Earlaine Potatoes Earliblue Blueberries Early Autumn Pumpkins Early Buckskin Pumpkins Early Cheyenne Pie Pumpkins Early Crofton Early Gem Potatoes Early Golden Sweet Apples Early Greening Apples Early Harvest Apples Early Italian Garlic Early Joe Apples Early Red Bird Apples Early Regent Potatoes Early Richmond Cherries Early Rose Potatoes Early Russet Potatoes Early Russian Green Apples Early Season Olive Oil Early Strawberry Apples Early Sugar Loaf Apples Early Sugar Pumpkins Early Summer Pearmain Apples Early Transparent Apples Previous | Next | Etiolation© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedEtiolation is something happens to vegetables when they grow in the dark. The plant grows gangly or stalky long white shoots, struggling to find some light somewhere. You may have seen it happen to outdoor plants that you overwinter indoors. For culinary purposes, it's used more to mean blanching the plant -- growing them in the dark so that they stay white. Chlorophyll is what makes plants green; it can also be what makes some plants bitter and inedible. The blanched plants taste milder; and sometimes are also more tender and less fibrous. These vegetables are said to be "etiolated." It's usually done in the spring. The plants are planted, usually indoors, after the winter. The building that they are being grown in has its temperature slowly increased to signal to the plants that it's spring and time to start growing. They do, but they don't develop chlorophyll because they can't without any light. This is done to seakale, champagne rhubarb, chicory, etc. It is possible to blanch vegetables outside as well by putting pots over top them.
See Also:BlanchOther entries for: Technical TermsAccolade, Acetic Acid, Air-Layered, Alliumophobia, Alpha Amylase, Alum, Alveograph, Ascorbic Acid, Best Before Dates, Biologique, Butyric Acid, Carbonic Acid, Carnauba Wax, Chocolate Bloom, Collops, Cracker Barrel, Cucina Casalinga, Cultivar, Deipnophobia, Dioecious Plants, Du Jour, Dunking, Etiolation, EU Designations, F1, Firkin, Free-Range Chickens, Free-Range Total Freedom, French Revolutionary Calendar, Gastrique, Gâte-sauce, Gomme Arabique, Hybrid, Invaiatura, Kosher, Lachanophobia, Lime (Chemical), Listeria, Lye, Mageirocophobia, Maillard Reaction, Open Pollinated, Ostraconophobia, Oxalic Acid, Pack Date, Pavé, Phosphoric Acid, Plant Variety Protection, Pome, Potassium Nitrite, Potluck Suppers, Punnet, Quinine, Rifilature, Scald (Fruit), Sell-By Dates, Sodium Nitrite, Stufatura, Sunday Roast, Traditional Free-Range, Turophile, Use-By Dates, Yatai, Ye Shi, Yearling, Yuuki |
|

