Baba Berries Baba Franchuk's Rocambole Garlic Babáco Melons Baby Back Ribs Baby Basmati Baby Bear Pumpkins Baby Beef Liver Baby Blue Hubbard Squash Baby Bok Choy Baby Boo Pumpkins Baby Carrots Baby Corn Baby Cut Carrots Baby Green Hubbard Squash Baby Indian Pumpkin Baby Lima Beans Baby Pam Pumpkins Baby Potatoes Baby Red Hubbard Squash Baby Shells Babycham Bacanora Bacardi Rum Baccicia Beans Bachelor Apples Back Bacon Back Half Back of Rump Roast Back Ribs Back Ribs Backfin Crabmeat Backs -- Chicken Bacon Bacon -- Ayrshire Middle Bacon -- Back Previous | Next | Fiddleheads© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Fiddleheads A Fiddlehead is the top of a fern when it first pokes through the ground in spring, curled up like the head of a fiddle. They are only available for 3 weeks in May. They are still mostly gathered from the wild, though commercial production is being explored. They taste something like asparagus and spinach. The most popular fern to harvest them from, and the one that is deemed the safest, is the Ostrich Fern. (see Nutrition below.) Ostrich Fern Fiddleheads will have on them brown, damp "chaff" that feels papery or "fuzz" that feels like down. Fiddleheads are very popular throughout Asia and the Pacific, particularly in Japan and in Korea, and popular in eastern parts of North America. In Asia they are cooked; in Hawaii, just parboiled. When buying fresh Fiddleheads, choose luminous, bright green ones that are small -- no more than 2 inches across and 2 inches tall (5 cm x 5 cm) including the stalk. Fiddleheads can also be bought canned. Fresh, they only have a shelf life of about 3 days. Cooking Tips Health Canada. Food Safety Measures For Fiddleheads. 2 June 2006. Retrieved Feb 2007 from http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ahc-asc/media/advisories-avis/2006/2006_42_e.html Also called: Athyrium esculentum (Scientific Name); Tête de violon (French); Farntriebe (German); Warabi (Japanese)
Other entries for: FernsFiddleheads, Warabi, Zenmai Other entries for:VegetablesAgave, Artichokes, Asparagus, Brassica Family, Canned Vegetables, Cardoons, Celery, Corn, Cucumbers, Eggplant, Frozen Vegetables, Garlic, Gourds, Horseradish Tree, Leafy Vegetables, Lotus, Mixed Vegetables, Mushrooms, Pak Wan, Peas, Peppers, Root Vegetables, Sago Palm, Seaweed, Spinach, Sprouts, Squash, Tomatoes, Viscous Vegetables |
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