I HAVE CLOSED DOWN THIS BLOG. Please click the photo above to be REDIRECTED TO MY NEW (continuation) BLOG.

Saturday 16 March 2019

Rhubarb rhubarb


I finally achieved a small tick off my 'bucket list' by visiting the Rhubarb Triangle. It's a small (9 sq mile) area between Leeds and Wakefield that is celebrated for growing the tender, sweet, bright pink forced rhubarb. It is grown in long, low, dark, heated sheds and harvested, between January and March, only by candlelight to prevent the stems going green and hard due to photosynthesis. All the work is still done by hand, a back-breaking and labour-intensive process (which explains why it is relatively expensive to buy).

Many gardens and allotments still grow rhubarb. It's technically a vegetable, but used as a fruit. My dad grew it and the stems were thick and green, needing gentle stewing and lots of sugar, but I grew up rather liking the flavour (and the peculiar way the oxalic acid 'coats' your teeth!). The Yorkshire Forced Rhubarb (now an EU protected designation of origin - PDO - like Parma Ham or Champagne) is sought after by top restaurants and stores in the UK and abroad. It's very different from the outdoor kind, having thin stems with a delightful colour, very tender and flavourful.















We visited E Oldroyd and Sons farm. Their website (HERE) has lots of fascinating information about the history, cultivation and uses of rhubarb, a plant native to Siberia (which is why it likes Yorkshire's climate!) We were given a talk and then taken into the rhubarb sheds to look. We had my granddaughters with us, and I have to say they got rather bored as the talk went on for over an hour and was not aimed at children. They were very well-behaved, however, and it is good to give them new experiences.  We bought some stems and I'm going to try gently cooking it in orange juice, as recommended. Yum.


6 comments:

  1. I feel the deepest sympathy for your grandchildren!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I'd heard about this from my grandfather who maintained that the sulphur in the air as a result of nearby industry was vital to growing good, tasty rhubarb. I had no idea that rhubarb growing was still carried out in this way.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I had no idea that it was grown that way. My mum always had some growing in the garden!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I didn't know either that it was grown that way.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Hi Jenny - love rhubarb and have always been fascinated by the rhubarb triangle, so am delighted to read this. I love it when I can get some from friend's gardens ... enjoy your special purchase ... the tender stems are so good too ... cheers Hilary

    ReplyDelete
  6. E Oldroyd and Sons farm, now I am envious!!

    ReplyDelete