One-year old Red rhubarb

Savory Rhubarb

Cakes, crisps, crumbles, muffins, pies – tart and sour stalks of rhubarb have long provided a tangy, citrus-like food addition to plain, bare-bones diets. Rhubarb is the “pie plant” and as stated in previous blogs, the availability of sugar in the late 1700s increased its popularity.

But, rhubarb goes further than pie. Savory rhubarb has a lot to offer too. It’s a vegetable masquerading as a fruit, and can be used in place of ingredients such as carrots; tomatoes; and in ketchup and salsa mixtures. Here are a few points, followed by some savory and sweet rhubarb recipes.

First – Nutritionally, raw rhubarb can provide up to 10% of the daily requirements of Vitamin C and 30 % of Vitamin K (this last point may be of interest to people with blood clotting concerns). Its main value is its high fibre content, its purgative/laxative qualities, and its low-calorie count (see Health Benefits Times link for further details). Rhubarb was valuable in fur-trading and pioneer days for offsetting an all-meat diet.

Rhubarb growing in a back alley

Rhubarb growing in a back alley

Rhubarb in Edmonton backyard

Backyard rhubarb

Second – Rhubarb grows almost anywhere, and is seasonal in North America from May to about July. It turns up in surprising places;  tucked in beside a neighbour’s garage, or on a dusty alley poking through a fence.  You might be lucky to inherit a clump of rhubarb – if the centre has died out and there are a bunch of outlying plants, consider transplanting rhubarb crowns in the spring or fall. Rhubarb seeds are ready to harvest, according to Patricia Milligan, Northlands Agriculture Education coordinator, when the seeds have turned brown and fallen off the flower stalks into the centre crease of the leaves (in the fall). Then keep the seeds in a cool, dry environment and plant in the spring – but note hybrid seeds don’t always come true to the parent.

 

 

Third – Rhubarb has a strong Canadian component.  Amber Paquette, Historian Laureate for Edmonton, says that rhubarb is a hallmark Métis traditional food. Early European traders brought rhubarb crowns with them. Then the plant was brought across Canada by Hudson’s Bay Company employees (who were 80% Indigenous) and cultivated in gardens for each fort and outpost.  Homesteaders and pioneers also brought rhubarb crowns or seeds with them.

Métis red rhubarb is potentially a  variety of rhubarb that may be unique to areas such as homesteads along Alberta’s Athabasca Landing Trail.  In the gold-rush town of Barkerville, British Columbia, rhubarb plants grow with abandon on the slopes behind the Chinatown section. So far DNA analysis has not been done on culinary rhubarb to determine if there are distinct varieties other than by colour.  See previous BCFHN posts about rhubarb.

Rhubarb plants found along the slopes in Barkerville

Rhubarb plants have spread along the slope in Barkerville

Métis rhubarb - photo contributed by M. Bablitz

Métis red rhubarb – photo contributed by M. Bablitz

 

Rhubarb too small to pick

These stalks are too small to be harvested.

Green and red stalks are equally sweet and nutritious

4 stalks for $2.00 – if offered free rhubarb, accept it!

Fourth – red or green rhubarb stalks are equally nutritious. Runaway rhubarb is usually green with streaks of red -it’s supposed to be as sweet as all-red. If you are fortunate, someone will give you rhubarb, or you’ll be driving down a quiet road, and spy a rhubarb plant in the ditch. Never remove stalks from first-year plants, pull out the stalks rather than cutting them, and pick judiciously until the plant is well established, always leave at least half of the plant, and only pick ones that are 20 cm. or more in length.

 

 

 

Savory Rhubarb – here are five ways with rhubarb from the Smithsonian Magazine (check out the recipes and suggestions, they are creative and interesting).

  1.  Raw:  dip in sugar or honey – choose smaller thinner stalks for this, as they will likely  taste sweeter.  And, don’t eat the leaves. See a previous blog for readers’ suggestions on things to do with rhubarb leaves: polish barbecues and shoes,  wear them like hats, etc.  The possibilities beckon.
  2. Stirred: make into a sauce to pour over yogurt or ice cream and add sliced bananas or strawberries if you want. Or make into jams and chutneys in place of similar fibrous ingredients. Chutney is particularly nice.
  3. Smothered:
  4. Roasted:
  5. Dried: Rhubarb fruit leather (basically rhubarb and water, dried).

Finally, here are a few recipes from some of my favorite old-time cookbooks:  Savory rhubarb or sweet, it’s all good.

Canadian Cookbook - stewed rhubarb

Canadian Cookbook – stewed rhubarb (1924 edition)

Rhubarb Crisp recipe from "Come 'n' Get it - Roundup Recipes from Ranch Country" by B. Barss

hubarb Crisp recipe from “Come ‘n’ Get it – Roundup Recipes from Ranch Country” by B. Barss

Rhubarb pudding from Mennonite Community Cookbook by ME Showalter

Rhubarb pudding – quick and easy – Mennonite Community Cookbook by ME Showalter (1972 edition)

BC Dept. of Education 1932 textbook rhubarb sauce recipe

BC Foods, Nutrition and Home Management manual – note hand-written comments (1932)

BCWI Centennial Cookbook (1958) - rhubarb pie recipe

BCWomen’s Institute Centennial Cookbook (1958) – rhubarb pie recipe

 

 

Further Reading: