Asparagus

Asparagus
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Asparagus_botanical.jpg



Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class:Liliopsida
Order:Asparagales
Family:Asparagaceae
Genus:Asparagus
Species:A. officinalis
Binomial name
Asparagus officinalis
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Asparagus.jpg
Asparagus

Asparagus is the name of a vegetable obtained from one species within the genus Asparagus, specifically the young shoots of Asparagus officinalis. It has been used from very early times as a culinary vegetable, owing to its delicate flavour and diuretic properties. There is a recipe for cooking asparagus in the oldest surviving book of recipes, Apicius's 3rd century CE De re coquinaria, Book III.

In their simplest form, the shoots are boiled or steamed until tender and served with a light sauce like hollandaise or melted butter or a drizzle of olive oil with a dusting of Parmesan cheese. A refinement is to tie the shoots into sheaves and stand them so that the lower part of the stalks are boiled, while the more tender heads are steamed. Tall cylindrical asparagus cooking pots have liners with handles and perforated bases to make this process foolproof.

Unlike most vegetables, where the smaller and thinner are the more tender, thick asparagus stalks have more tender volume to the proportion of skin. When asparagus has been in the market too long, the cut ends will have dried and gone slightly concave. The best asparagus is picked and washed while the water comes to the boil. Fastidious cooks scrape asparagus stalks with a vegetable peeler, stroking away from the head, and refresh them in ice-cold water before steaming them; the peel is often added back to the cooking water and removed only after the asparagus is done, this is supposed to prevent diluting the flavor. Small or full-sized stalks can be made into asparagus soup. Cantonese restaurants in the United States often serve asparagus stir-fried with chicken, shrimp, or beef. Asparagus is one of few foods which is considered acceptable to eat with the hands in polite company, although this is more common in Europe.

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Nutrition data for asparagus
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White asparagus (left) and green asparagus (right)

Another thing worth mentioning with asparagus is that some of its constituents are metabolised and excreted in the urine, giving it a distinctive, mildly unpleasant odor. The smell is caused by various sulfur-containing degradation products (e.g. mercaptans and thioesters). As a result of studies, it was not only shown that only around 40% of the test persons displayed this characteristic smell, but also that not everyone is able to smell the odor once it is produced. [1] (http://www.studentbmj.com/back_issues/0800/education/277.html)

Because of its shape, Asparagus was believed to have aphrodisiac effects. This was never proven.

The amino acid asparagine gets its name from asparagus, the asparagus plant being rich in this compound.

Asparagus as a vegetable is widely grown around villages near Evesham in the Vale of Evesham in Worcestershire, England, and the plant grows wild on England's south coast. In Evesham it is still known by some by its original local name of Sparrow Grass.

There are various places in Germany, like the Brandenburger Zauche the Franconian Knoblauchsland, near Hannover, Germany and L?g, Germany. Abensberg, Germany as well as Schrobenhausen, Germany where asparagus is cultivated. German asparagus is considered to be among the best in the world. Asparagus is, however, today grown widely around the world. In Germany, the official end of the asparagus season is June 24.

Other plants called asparagus

Many related and unrelated plants may be called "asparagus" or said to be "used as asparagus" when eaten for their shoots. In particular, the shoots of a distantly related plant, Ornithogalum pyrenaicum may be called "Prussian asparagus". See Category:Stem vegetables.


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