V-Slicer V8 Juice Vache Qui Rit Cheese Vacherin Chaput Cheese Vacherin d'Abondance Vacherin du Haut-Doubs Vacherin Fribourgeois Vacherin Mont d'Or Valdeón Cheese Valdôtaine -- À la Valencia Oranges Valencia Peanuts Valenciano Pumpkins Valencienne -- À la Valentine Beans Valentine Buns Valerian Valetta Potatoes Valisa Potatoes Vallarta Beans Vallée des Baux Cracked Olives Valor Potatoes Van Cherries Van Der Hum Cream Liqueur Van Gogh Potatoes Vandevere Apples Vanessa Potatoes Vanilla Vanilla -- Marseille Vanilla Baking Powder Vanilla Bean Paste Vanilla Essence Vanilla Extract Vanilla Ice Cream Vanilla Pod Previous | Next | Quinoa© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforced![]() Quinoa Quinoa is used as a grain, but it's actually a seed. It grows on a plant that ranges from 4 to 6 feet (1.2 to 1.8 metres) tall, whose stalks flower and then produce tiny seeds about 1/8 inch (32 mm) in diameter, that can be white, black, pink or red. They look rather like bird seed -- or, more kindly, sesame seed. If you've heard about Quinoa, chances are you've heard "wonder grain", "more protein than wheat", "ancient food treasured by the ancient Incas..." but you'll have noticed that, like anything sanctioned by the Health Foodies, they never quite get around to mentioning taste, and when they do, it's always "oh, taste? mild nutty flavour." Truth is, to many people's tastes, Quinoa is bitter. It isn't even a pleasant bitterness, like say rocket, or radicchio or watercress. It's just bitter. The black and red seeds are the most bitter; the white ones less so. The bitterness comes from a waxy coating on all the seeds, which is nature's way of making them unappealing to birds and insects (and one might add, to us.) Almost all Quinoa sold commercially is processed to remove most of this bitter coating, but you've still got to do a bit of followup work with thorough rinsing. And even that doesn't entirely clear away the bitter taste. Served solo, it's terrible. Perhaps the ancient Incas did ate it that way, but they probably also ate bugs, and we won't be acquiring a taste for that anytime soon, either. You really need to combine it with other grains so that its bitter flavour isn't as pronounced. And if after all that, your beloved still looks up from the plate and asks why you're having bird seed for dinner, just make sure you haven't planned something equally healthy for afters. Cooking Tips Also called: Quinoa (French); Quinoa (German); Quinoa (Spanish)
Other entries for: QuinoaQuinoa Flakes, Quinoa Other entries for:GrainsAmaranth, Barley, Buckwheat, Cereals, Corn, Flax, Kamut, Millet, Oats, Red River Cereal, Rice, Rye, Semolina, Sorghum, Spelt, Teff, Triticale, Wheat |
|


