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Rhubarb Recipes


Special to AOL Food From Sherri Brooks Vinton






Rhubarb Crumble
This is a comfort food staple in British homes. Easy to do, tasty to
eat. Top it with a little vanilla ice cream for added goodness. Add a
little ginger, if you like, to spice it up a bit.

Crumble:
• 1 cup flour
• 1/2 cup brown sugar, packed
• 1/4 teaspoon salt
• 1 stick cold butter, cut into pieces
• 2 tablespoons finely diced crystallized ginger (optional)

Filling:
• 1 tablespoon butter
• 4 cups chopped rhubarb
• 3/4 cup sugar
• 1/4 tsp salt
• 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
• 1 tablespoon freshly grated ginger (optional)

Preheat oven to 375. Lightly grease an 8 x 8 inch Pyrex dish with
butter. In a medium bowl combine dry crumble ingredients. Add butter
and crystallized ginger, if using, and rub the butter pieces and flour
between your thumb and fingertips or cut them together with a pastry
blender until coarse crumbs the size of peas form. Cool in the
refrigerator while you prepare the filling. In a medium saucepan melt
butter over medium heat. Add remaining filling ingredients and cook
until fruit begins to break down, about 10 minutes. Pour filling into
buttered dish, top with crumble and bake until lightly browned on top,
about 45 minutes. Serves 6-8.

Rhubarb Fizz
This is a refreshing alternative to sweet colas and a great addition to
a sunny Spring picnic.

• 2 stalks fresh rhubarb, chopped, about 2 cups
• 1/4 cup sugar
• 1/2 vanilla bean or 1/4 tsp vanilla extract
• ice
• 1 liter seltzer

Add 2 cups of water, chopped rhubarb, vanilla, and sugar to a small
saucepan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer until reduced by
half and rhubarb falls apart, about 15 minutes. Strain and cool
resulting syrup. Fill a pitcher or four glasses with ice, pour in
seltzer and add syrup. Stir to combine and enjoy. Makes 4 drinks.

Pork Chops with Rhubarb Glaze
The tangy rhubarb cuts the richness of the pork in this dish. Heritage
breed pigs yield the most flavorful chops-check with the farmers at
your local market –they're worth finding.

• 3 cups diced rhubarb
• 2 tablespoons orange juice or water
• 1/4 teaspoon salt
• 4 bone-in pork chops, preferably heritage breed
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
• 1/8 teaspoon pepper
• 1/2 teaspoon five spice powder or 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
• 1 tablespoon flour
• 3 tablespoons butter
• 1 tablespoon chopped parsley, optional

In a medium saucepan combine first three ingredients. Cook over medium
heat until rhubarb completely breaks down 15-20 minutes. Strain liquid
though a fine mesh sieve, discard solids. Heat a large sauté pan over
medium high heat. Sprinkle chops with salt, pepper, and spice and dust
with flour. Add two tablespoons butter to pan and, after it stops
foaming, add chops to pan. Saute until brown, about 5-7 minutes. Turn
chops, turn heat down to medium and cook through, about 7 minutes more.

Remove chops from pan. Deglaze pan by pouring strained rhubarb liquid
into it and, after liquid boils, scraping up brown bits from bottom of
pan. Add remaining tablespoon of butter to pan, stirring to
incorporate it into sauce. Pour sauce over chops, sprinkle with
parsley, if using, and serve. Serves 4.


Rhubarb


Special to AOL Food From Sherri Brooks Vinton



Ahh, Springtime. The air is a little warmer, the sun shines a bit brighter and our taste buds are looking for something as peppy as our step. Pick up a few stalks of rhubarb and you'll have a delightfully
tart fruit that brings the right, bright note to your Spring dishes.

From as far back as 2700 BC, Chinese varieties of rhubarb have been appreciated for their curative properties. Indeed, rhubarb's astringent quality seems just the thing for dusting out the cobwebs
after a long winter. As one of the first foods to come off the fields each spring, this vegetable (yes, it's a vegetable not a fruit) is cherished by seasonal eaters who hail it as the kick-off to the year's growing season.

You can find fresh, crisp stalks at your farmers' market where patient growers have tended their patches for several years before being rewarded with a bountiful harvest. Rhubarb is also readily available,
in the early spring months, in the grocery store.

Look for long stalks that have a sheen and feel sturdy-they shouldn't be dull or rubbery. While rhubarb is prized for its ruby red color, which lends a pretty pink hue to your recipes, the plant can be pink or
even green. Color does not determine sweetness.

In England, rhubarb crumble is as popular as our apple pie. But you don't have to save your rhubarb for dessert-every course can benefit from the tangy zip of this easy-to-use specimen. Its flavor pairs
beautifully with rich, savory dishes such as roast meats, particularly game, making it a cozy companion to spring lamb. Its citrus-like flavor also works well with fish, as perfect a pairing as a squeeze of
lemon. Just strip the leaves, which are mildly poisonous, from the stalks, give them a quick rinse and you're ready to cook it up.

Just like those first warm breezes, the rhubarb season is fleeting so it's worth stocking up while you can. The stalks can be washed, diced, and frozen in tightly sealed plastic bags or turned into preserves so
you can enjoy rhubarb's tangy flavor whenever you like-a little zing of spring all year round.



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