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#1
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
"Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David |
#2
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
I find tarragon preserved in vinegar is all I need for the cooking I do with
it, although I also have some in the freezer. If you want help tasting the Bearnaise sauces, I'm available. "David Hare-Scott" wrote in message news "Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David |
#3
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
tarragon is about smell, nothing the tongue picks up. I bring my tarragon in from
outside, toss some in the freezer, let some dry in the drawer. it is not as strong, but when I strip a branch to add to food I can smell the aroma and know it is fine. if the leaves are crushed and they dont smell... well toss that. Ingrid "David Hare-Scott" wrote: "Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#4
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
"Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I find tarragon preserved in vinegar is all I need for the cooking I do with it, although I also have some in the freezer. If you want help tasting the Bearnaise sauces, I'm available. The queue starts on the right but you will have to fight off some children who have been indulged in this respect. David |
#5
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message news "Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David Russian tarragon is often available because it is grown from seed and is tasteless. I have found that nurseries don't know the difference and sell the Russian as the real thing and most of them buy the seedlings from wholesalers anyway. Even seed companies sell the seeds as a culinary herb. OTOH French tarragon can only be propagated from splitting rootstock, which is best done in spring. I would imagine that growing conditions might contribute to flavour variations as well as different cultivars. Mine is quite strong. Ahhh, the smell in the kitchen of tarragon chicken cooking........ Graham |
#6
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message news "Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David Russian tarragon is often available because it is grown from seed and is tasteless. I have found that nurseries don't know the difference and sell the Russian as the real thing and most of them buy the seedlings from wholesalers anyway. Even seed companies sell the seeds as a culinary herb. OTOH French tarragon can only be propagated from splitting rootstock, which is best done in spring. I would imagine that growing conditions might contribute to flavour variations as well as different cultivars. Mine is quite strong. Ahhh, the smell in the kitchen of tarragon chicken cooking........ Graham |
#7
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message news "Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David Russian tarragon is often available because it is grown from seed and is tasteless. I have found that nurseries don't know the difference and sell the Russian as the real thing and most of them buy the seedlings from wholesalers anyway. Even seed companies sell the seeds as a culinary herb. OTOH French tarragon can only be propagated from splitting rootstock, which is best done in spring. I would imagine that growing conditions might contribute to flavour variations as well as different cultivars. Mine is quite strong. Ahhh, the smell in the kitchen of tarragon chicken cooking........ Graham |
#8
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
"David Hare-Scott" wrote in message news "Andrew Ostrander" wrote in message ... I think you are off-base on tarragon. Dried tarragon has little flavour but freezing it works, and so does making tarragon vinegar. As for your remark about cultivars of tarragon, I understand that French tarragon doesn't set seed, so all the tarragon plants in the world are clones, and therefore the same strain. (Russian tarragon is a different herb, inferior in for cuisinary use.) Perhaps our differences are a case of international variation in material available and conditions. I have found store-bought dried tarragon to be very flavoursome most of the time and I cook with it quite a bit. I suspect the stuff that wasn't good was old stock or was not stored properly, perhaps that has been your problem. I wonder about the provenence of the "French" tarragon around the world, it would be interesting to see if the material in various countries could be traced back to some one ancestral source or if the non-seeding variety has arisen more than once in history. I don't know how you do such a study short of DNA analysis. I have found considerable variation in the flavour of fresh tarragon. Was this because of different cultivars of French tarragon or was it due to confusion of French and Russian varieties (some nurseries don't seem to know that there are two sorts and I cannot tell the difference by sight) or variations in growing conditions and seasonal effects? I don't know. Now that I have more time and space for gardening perhaps I will conduct a grand tarragon study - win, lose or draw it would be fun (yum!). David Russian tarragon is often available because it is grown from seed and is tasteless. I have found that nurseries don't know the difference and sell the Russian as the real thing and most of them buy the seedlings from wholesalers anyway. Even seed companies sell the seeds as a culinary herb. OTOH French tarragon can only be propagated from splitting rootstock, which is best done in spring. I would imagine that growing conditions might contribute to flavour variations as well as different cultivars. Mine is quite strong. Ahhh, the smell in the kitchen of tarragon chicken cooking........ Graham |
#9
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Tarragon (was Drying Parsley)
My understanding is that French tarragon can be propagated from
cuttings. Regards, Dianna On Thu, 18 Dec 2003 00:32:50 GMT, "Graham" wrote: Russian tarragon is often available because it is grown from seed and is tasteless. I have found that nurseries don't know the difference and sell the Russian as the real thing and most of them buy the seedlings from wholesalers anyway. Even seed companies sell the seeds as a culinary herb. OTOH French tarragon can only be propagated from splitting rootstock, which is best done in spring. I would imagine that growing conditions might contribute to flavour variations as well as different cultivars. Mine is quite strong. Ahhh, the smell in the kitchen of tarragon chicken cooking........ Graham _______________________________________________ To reply, please remove "fluff" from my address. |
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