Have you ever had a sunchoke? I hadn’t either until I pitched these recipes. And now I can’t believe I waited this long to have one. A sunchoke, aka a Jerusalem artichoke, is a root vegetable that ...
2. Boil sunchokes for five to 10 minutes until soft, like you would cook a potato. Remove sunchokes from water and slice in half. 3. Scoop out the meat of the sunchoke without damaging the skin. Place ...
Lay 16 of the wonton skins out on a work surface. Place a heaping spoonful of the puree in the center of 8 skins. Brush the remaining 8 skins with water and place them on top of the filled skins. Run ...
Frieda's Specialty Produce, which supplies produce to local Schnuck's stores, regularly sends me press releases about unusual fruits and vegetables. They're usually interesting, so I tend to post them ...
When it comes to Native American-European feasts, turkeys and cranberries get all the glory. The lowly sunchoke, aka Jerusalem artichoke, is ignored, a lonely tuber left to hunker down in winter’s ...
Bring lentils, stock and kombu to a boil and reduce to a simmer. (Kombu or kelp reduces the gas effects of legumes.) When lentils are at the al dente’ stage, turn it off and add a ¼ tsp of salt, cover ...
Artichokes and sunchokes (Jerusalem artichokes) are members of different botanical families—artichokes are part of the thistle family, while sunchokes are related to sunflowers—but their complementary ...
Think pancakes are best served at breakfast? Think again. Lead chef-instructor Ben Kiely at Pacific Institute of Culinary Arts created this savoury recipe that shines a spotlight on sunchokes and ...
Lay 16 of the wonton skins out on a work surface. Place a heaping spoonful of the puree in the center of 8 skins. Brush the remaining 8 skins with water and place them on top of the filled skins. Run ...
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