Rhubarb Cake
Rhubarb Cobblers/Crisps
Rhubarb Cookies/Breads
Rhubarb Desserts
Rhubarb Drinks
Rhubarb Muffins
Rhubarb Pies
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Rhubarb Sauces & Misc
Growing Rhubarb
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Recipes For Delicious Rhubarb
By Moray Mair
It's been an impatient wait for spring's field rhubarb - the first Irish
fruit since the autumn...
Sweet
The bliss of the initial rush of crumbles and pies is fading. Now the
sunshine loiters and with it an opportunity to offer rhubarb a floral
accent - lemon zest, honey, almonds, mint, orange. There's only rhubarb
and sugar in the recipes below, with that there is plenty of potential
to play.
Cordial
Get hold of as much rhubarb as you can. Wash it, chop it and put it in a
pan with the same weight in water and a bit more than half the weight in
sugar. Bring it to the boil and let it simmer slowly till tender. Turn
the heat of and leave it be for an hour or so. Then strain it and bottle
it - if you've no fine sieve, strain it through a clean
handkerchief/cloth/t-shirt. With the left over rhubarb gunk you could
make a curd - blitz it up and add a few drops of water. Then, over a low
heat, fold some unsalted butter through it. Or you could leave it gunky.
A spoonful with some yogurt and roasted oats makes a fine breakfast
Jam
Chop your rhubarb - six or so stalks should be about right for a regular
sized jam jar - pop it in a pot with half a handful of sugar and bring
it to a medium heat. Cook away for ten minutes or so, stirring now and
again. When most of the rhubarb is falling apart (but some still has a
bit of bite) strain it through a sieve to get as much of the clear juice
that will come naturally. With an eagle eye reduce the juice until it's
syrupy. Take it off the heat and mix through your rhubarb. Taste it and
if it needs a little more sugar stir it through on a low heat. Then
it'll be ready to jar.
Compote
Put a tightly packed layer of rhubarb in a baking tray and sprinkle
generously with sugar. If the rhubarb is not wet from washing splash it
with water. It will need ten minutes, covered, inside an oven that's 190
degrees c. Then roast it, coverless, with the occasional stir until it
begins to golden. A fair amount of the water from the raw rhubarb will
have evaporated so the flavour will be intense, and likely more sour
than you'd expect. Anyhow, while still hot blitz it up and trickle honey
into it to taste
Savoury
Rhubarb is as keen a companion as any to our cheap and delicious oily
fish (trout, mackerel, pilchards etc.). Sweat some sliced onions in
butter until completely tender. Then add raw rhubarb (sliced lengthwise
and cut into two inch lengths), a generous bunch of thyme and grind of
black pepper and a sliver of orange zest. Mix through on the heat and
then stuff inside your fishies. Smother them in a little more butter,
salt and pepper. Pop them in a parcel of baking paper with a glug of
white wine and bake at a medium high heat.
(an as yet untried idea: sliced and grilled over a fire, with a very
slowly braised pork shoulder, boiled baby potatoes, and chopped curly
parsley)
Tonicky
The cordial has endless booze potential, a favourite being with gin,
fizzy water and a squeeze of lime. Here's a recipe for something a
little less jazzy which'd be just about ready for drinking in the meagre
months of February and March.
Rhubarb mead
The quantities are such that a 5 litre plastic water bottle can be used
for the fermenting.
3 litres of water
1 ¼ litres of chopped rhubarb
¾ litre of honey
Half a sachet of wine yeast
Heat the water until simmering, and stir in the honey until dissolved.
Then pop in your rhubarb and take of the heat.
Activate the yeast in some warmed water and a pinch of sugar.
Once the rhubarb mixture has cooled stir in the yeast.
Funnel everything into your container, seal, and punch a thin whole in
the lid so it won't blow up on you.
You'll want a speedy fermentation, so the rhubarb hasn't time to get too
funky. For this to happen, you'll need it to be in quite warm
conditions, so rap the bottle up in your winter jackets and put it in a
dark, warm room.
It should be ready in about two weeks. When the bubbles have stopped
rising, and the sweetness has all but gone (taste through a straw), it
will be time to strain and bottle.
About the Author:
This article is part of The Mutation, an Irish arts and culture blog.
The Mutation is the voice of
http://www.mutantspace.ie, an online arts
co-operative, based in Ireland. We publish articles on everything from
music to visual art, theatre to food, book reviews to websites and
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We're always interested to hear what you have to say so if you have
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Source:
Recipes For Delicious Rhubarb
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