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wawwiz 01-04-2015 01:18 PM

Broccolli flowers
 
Well for some reason all my plants went from 1" heads right to flowers, question: Are the stalks and flowers (yellow things) edible? Leaves are shot, but I have long stems and yellow flowers.

David Hare-Scott[_2_] 01-04-2015 10:30 PM

Broccolli flowers
 
wawwiz wrote:
Well for some reason all my plants went from 1" heads right to
flowers, question: Are the stalks and flowers (yellow things) edible?
Leaves are shot, but I have long stems and yellow flowers.


yes, the texture will not be a nice but they will not do any harm


--
David

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Corporate propaganda is their
protection against democracy

Fran Farmer 02-04-2015 02:37 AM

Broccolli flowers
 
On 1/04/2015 11:18 PM, wawwiz wrote:
Well for some reason all my plants went from 1" heads right to flowers, question: Are the stalks and flowers (yellow things) edible? Leaves are shot, but I have long stems and yellow flowers.


I make curried cream of Broccoli soup with the stems which are not much
use for any other thing other than giving to the rabbits or chooks.
When the offspring studied at University and suffered the usual student
poverty, a good free feed could be had by asking the veg section staff
of the supermarket for the broccoli stems "to feed to my rabbit" and
then using my recipe to transform said stems into something delicious.

phorbin 02-04-2015 01:42 PM

Broccolli flowers
 
In article ,
says...
Well for some reason all my plants went from 1" heads right to flowers, question:
Are the stalks and flowers (yellow things) edible? Leaves are shot,
but I have long stems and yellow flowers.



Some brassicas will bolt almost from seedlings if the weather is too warm.

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George Shirley[_3_] 02-04-2015 01:44 PM

Broccolli flowers
 
On 4/1/2015 8:37 PM, Fran Farmer wrote:
On 1/04/2015 11:18 PM, wawwiz wrote:
Well for some reason all my plants went from 1" heads right to
flowers, question: Are the stalks and flowers (yellow things) edible?
Leaves are shot, but I have long stems and yellow flowers.


I make curried cream of Broccoli soup with the stems which are not much
use for any other thing other than giving to the rabbits or chooks. When
the offspring studied at University and suffered the usual student
poverty, a good free feed could be had by asking the veg section staff
of the supermarket for the broccoli stems "to feed to my rabbit" and
then using my recipe to transform said stems into something delicious.

My wife will eat the stems that way too, I prefer to eat the rabbit.

A nice morning here for gardeners, a light fog is watering the plants
and, supposedly, the sun will be out and get us warm a little later this
morning.

wawwiz 02-04-2015 01:44 PM

Broccolli flowers
 
Our winter this year in north Texas was actually pretty warm, guess that was the reason.

On Thursday, April 2, 2015 at 6:40:09 AM UTC-5, phorbin wrote:
In article ,
says...
Well for some reason all my plants went from 1" heads right to flowers, question:
Are the stalks and flowers (yellow things) edible? Leaves are shot,
but I have long stems and yellow flowers.



Some brassicas will bolt almost from seedlings if the weather is too warm.

---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com



wawwiz 02-04-2015 01:47 PM

Broccolli flowers
 


Wouldn't happen to have a recipe handy? Sounds good and guess I could sprinkle the flowers on top for color. Thanks for all the replies

Fran Farmer 03-04-2015 05:07 AM

Broccolli flowers
 
On 2/04/2015 11:47 PM, wawwiz wrote:


Wouldn't happen to have a recipe handy? Sounds good and guess I could sprinkle the flowers on top for color. Thanks for all the replies


Melt a good sized blob of butter in a saucepan, add a chopped onion.
Cook stirring now and then till the onion is translucent. Add chopped
up broccoli stem, add a generous helping of chicken stock (I'd say about
a pint and make it from a chicken stock cube as good quality stock makes
no substantive improvement in the soup). Add curry powder to suit your
taste (start with a teaspoonful). Pulverise with a stick blender (and
if you want to be really posh, rub through a sieve - I don't bother),
At this stage either reheat gently adding about half a cupful of cream
(don't boil or it'll curdle) or, reheat and then add some cream to each
individual bowlful of soup.

Fran Farmer 03-04-2015 05:25 AM

Broccolli flowers
 
On 3/04/2015 3:07 PM, Fran Farmer wrote:
On 2/04/2015 11:47 PM, wawwiz wrote:


Wouldn't happen to have a recipe handy? Sounds good and guess I could
sprinkle the flowers on top for color. Thanks for all the replies


Melt a good sized blob of butter in a saucepan, add a chopped onion.
Cook stirring now and then till the onion is translucent. Add chopped
up broccoli stem, add a generous helping of chicken stock (I'd say about
a pint and make it from a chicken stock cube as good quality stock makes
no substantive improvement in the soup). Add curry powder to suit your
taste (start with a teaspoonful).


At this point I should have mentioned that the soup should now simmer
gently for about 20 minutes.


Pulverise with a stick blender (and
if you want to be really posh, rub through a sieve - I don't bother), At
this stage either reheat gently adding about half a cupful of cream
(don't boil or it'll curdle) or, reheat and then add some cream to each
individual bowlful of soup.



David Hare-Scott[_2_] 03-04-2015 09:06 AM

Broccolli flowers
 
Fran Farmer wrote:
On 3/04/2015 3:07 PM, Fran Farmer wrote:
On 2/04/2015 11:47 PM, wawwiz wrote:


Wouldn't happen to have a recipe handy? Sounds good and guess I
could sprinkle the flowers on top for color. Thanks for all the
replies


Melt a good sized blob of butter in a saucepan, add a chopped onion.
Cook stirring now and then till the onion is translucent. Add
chopped up broccoli stem, add a generous helping of chicken stock
(I'd say about a pint and make it from a chicken stock cube as good
quality stock makes no substantive improvement in the soup). Add
curry powder to suit your taste (start with a teaspoonful).


At this point I should have mentioned that the soup should now simmer
gently for about 20 minutes.


Pulverise with a stick blender (and
if you want to be really posh, rub through a sieve - I don't
bother), At this stage either reheat gently adding about half a
cupful of cream (don't boil or it'll curdle) or, reheat and then add
some cream to each individual bowlful of soup.


That sounds like quite a tasty soup. To make it excellent follow the
directions but substitute something else for the broccoli. Just about any
vege would do, rubber floor mat in a pinch.

--
David

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Corporate propaganda is their
protection against democracy


Fran Farmer 03-04-2015 11:05 AM

Broccolli flowers
 
On 3/04/2015 7:06 PM, David Hare-Scott wrote:
Fran Farmer wrote:
On 3/04/2015 3:07 PM, Fran Farmer wrote:
On 2/04/2015 11:47 PM, wawwiz wrote:


Wouldn't happen to have a recipe handy? Sounds good and guess I
could sprinkle the flowers on top for color. Thanks for all the
replies

Melt a good sized blob of butter in a saucepan, add a chopped onion.
Cook stirring now and then till the onion is translucent. Add
chopped up broccoli stem, add a generous helping of chicken stock
(I'd say about a pint and make it from a chicken stock cube as good
quality stock makes no substantive improvement in the soup). Add
curry powder to suit your taste (start with a teaspoonful).


At this point I should have mentioned that the soup should now simmer
gently for about 20 minutes.


Pulverise with a stick blender (and
if you want to be really posh, rub through a sieve - I don't
bother), At this stage either reheat gently adding about half a
cupful of cream (don't boil or it'll curdle) or, reheat and then add
some cream to each individual bowlful of soup.


That sounds like quite a tasty soup. To make it excellent follow the
directions but substitute something else for the broccoli. Just about
any vege would do, rubber floor mat in a pinch.


:-)) Before you dismiss the broccoli stems, I suggest you try it. It
doesn't taste particularly like broccoli so is quite safe if you are a
broccoli hater. It has (pleasantly surprised) a few people who have
claimed to be broccoli haters.


phorbin 03-04-2015 01:36 PM

Broccolli flowers
 
In article , says...

That sounds like quite a tasty soup. To make it excellent follow the
directions but substitute something else for the broccoli. Just about any
vege would do, rubber floor mat in a pinch.


Add more butter for rubber floor mat.

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Jessica Alinari 16-04-2015 08:49 AM

I'd even suggest to prepare homegrown broccoli sprouts and add them to broccoli soups and salads. They add mild, pleasant taste and have higher nutritional value than mature broccoli.

~misfit~[_4_] 18-04-2015 07:42 AM

Broccolli flowers
 
Once upon a time on usenet Fran Farmer wrote:
On 2/04/2015 11:47 PM, wawwiz wrote:


Wouldn't happen to have a recipe handy? Sounds good and guess I
could sprinkle the flowers on top for color. Thanks for all the
replies


Melt a good sized blob of butter in a saucepan, add a chopped onion.
Cook stirring now and then till the onion is translucent. Add chopped
up broccoli stem, add a generous helping of chicken stock (I'd say
about a pint and make it from a chicken stock cube as good quality
stock makes no substantive improvement in the soup). Add curry
powder to suit your taste (start with a teaspoonful). Pulverise with
a stick blender (and if you want to be really posh, rub through a
sieve - I don't bother), At this stage either reheat gently adding
about half a cupful of cream (don't boil or it'll curdle) or, reheat
and then add some cream to each individual bowlful of soup.


Damn! Now I'm hungry...
--
Shaun.

"Humans will have advanced a long, long, way when religious belief has a
cozy little classification in the DSM."
David Melville (in r.a.s.f1)




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