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 | Parsnips© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Parsnips Parsnips are related to parsley, carrots and celery. They seem to rate with turnips in many people's books, which is that you either love them a lot, or hate them even more. They are one of the few vegetables that you don't want to harvest before a frost: they need a good snap of cold weather to convert some of the starch in them into sugar, making them sweeter. Parsnips are shaped like carrots. Their green tops (which aren't eaten) look a bit like flat parsley. Their skin can range from yellowish to creamy white. You can eat smaller, younger parsnips raw in salads. They have a pungent flavour when eaten raw, which gets milder when they are cooked. Larger, older parsnips have to be cooked, though they often have woody cores that won't soften even during cooking. You need to trim these out before or after cooking. It's these old, woody roots that have given parsnips a bad rap. Use parsnips pretty much as you would carrots -- that is, the flavour is different, but use in soups, mash them, roast them, boil them, etc. Buy firm, unblemished parsnips. In the UK, you can buy them frozen in bags, ready for roasting. Cooking Tips Also called: Pastinaca sativa (Scientific Name); Panais (French); Pastinacas (Spanish); Pastinaca (Portuguese); Pastinaca (Roman)
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