Peas
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Peas are grown to be used either "fresh" or dried. In fact, growing Peas for drying was the main reason for growing them up until recently, give or take a few hundred years. Even at the court of Louis XIV, it was still considered quite -- shall we say revolutionary? -- to eat fresh Peas. Because Peas can be dried reliably and easily, they became a useful form of reliable protein during winters, which is why many old traditional recipes use Dried Peas. Dried Peas are available whole or split, and are either green or yellow.
There are two types of fresh Peas. Garden or "English" Peas have to be shelled and you discard the shells. "Sugar snap" and "snow Peas", you can eat the pod. Though these are used a lot in Chinese cooking, they were actually introduced to China by the Dutch.
When buying fresh Peas in the pod, look for fresh stems on them. Avoid any limp, dry or yellowing pods.
Fresh Peas are preserved through canning or freezing. Canned Peas are a duller green because their chlorophyll is destroyed by the heat of the canning process. Both fresh and frozen Peas are superior to canned for nutrition and flavour -- before cooking, that is. Fresh Peas, however, start to degrade in nutritional value within a few hours of being picked, before the shipping to market and time on store shelves even begins. And as soon as they're picked, like corn, Peas begin converting the sugar in them which makes them sweet into starch, so the taste degrades as well. Frozen Peas, which are frozen within an hour or two of harvesting before nutritional degrading begins, are therefore one of the best forms in which to eat "fresh" Peas, unless you are able to run them from the back garden to your pot.
As a general rule for shelling peas, count on the yield of shelled peas being half or slightly less than half the weight of the peas in the pod that you started out with.
Petits pois
French "petits pois" are simply young Garden Peas, not another variety.Mushy Peas
Mushy Peas are just ordinary Peas treated with alkali to make them soft and starchy, so they will "moosh" well.
2 cups shelled Peas = 10 oz (280g) frozen
2 cups shelled Peas = 16 oz (450g) tinned, drained
1 cup cooked = 3 1/2 oz = 100g
To freeze, shell the pods, wash the peas, blanch for 1 1/2 minutes, plunge into cold water bath to cool, then drain well, pack and freeze up to 1 year.
Store dried Peas in airtight glass or ceramic jars.
While excavating Troy, archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann found 440 pounds (200 kg) of dried Peas in storage jars. He cooked some up and found them edible. The Greeks and Romans grew Peas.
Peas were generally eaten as a dried food up until someone in Europe in the 1600's decided to try eating them fresh, at which point fresh Peas became a great sensation. It became fashionable for Parisian ladies to eat a few fresh Peas after dinner or before going to bed to aid digestion.
The old nursery rhyme (below) shows just how many Peas we used to eat, and for how long we have been doing it: Pease pudding appeared on the tables of both rich and poor since Roman times. The Pease pudding was so thick it could be eaten with the fingers or spread on bread.
Peas were brought to North America with the colonists.
Pease pudding cold
Pease pudding in the pot
Nine days old
Pease was originally the singular form of the word pea (the 'se' at the end was dropped in the mid 1700's.)
Some people with posher accents in England are said to have vowels like just-snapped Peas.
Other entries for: Peas
Cowpeas, Field Peas, Peas, Snow Peas, Sugar Snap Peas, Winged Pea
Other entries for: Legumes
Beans, Lentils, Soybeans
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- Cabaret Potatoes
- Cabbage
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- Cabbage -- Chinese White
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- Caesar's Mushroom
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- Caesar Salad
- Cailletier Olives
- Caimito
- Caja China
- Caja Peas



