Vegetables
Vegetables used for culinary purposes comprise
roots and
tubers,
as potatoes, turnips, etc.; shoots and stems, as asparagus and
sea-kale; leaves and inflorescence, as spinach and cabbage; immature
seeds, grains, and seed receptacles, as green peas, corn, and
string-beans; and a few of the fruity products, as the tomato and the
squash. Of these the tubers rank the highest in nutritive value.
Vegetables are by no means the most nutritious
diet, as water
enters largely into their composition; but food to supply perfectly the
needs of the vital economy, must contain water and indigestible as well
as nutritive elements. Thus they are dietetically of great value, since
they furnish a large quantity of organic fluids. Vegetables are rich in
mineral elements, and are also of service in giving bulk to food. An
exclusive diet of vegetables, however, would give too great bulk, and
at the same time fail to supply the proper amount of food elements.
To
furnish the requisite amount of nitrogenous material for one day, if
potatoes alone were depended upon as food, a person would need to
consume about nine pounds; of turnips, sixteen pounds; of parsnips,
eighteen pounds; of cabbage, twenty-two pounds. Hence it is
wise to use them in combination with other articles of diet—grains,
whole-wheat bread, etc.—that supplement the qualities lacking in the
vegetables.
To
Select Vegetables.—All roots and tubers should be plump, free
from decay, bruises, and disease, and with fresh, unshriveled skins.
They are good from the time of maturing until they begin to germinate.
Sprouted vegetables are unfit for food. Potato sprouts contain a poison
allied to belladonna. All vegetables beginning to decay are unfit for
food.
Green vegetables to be wholesome should be freshly
gathered,
crisp, and juicy; those which have lain long in the market are very
questionable food. In Paris, a law forbids a market-man to offer for
sale any green vegetable kept more than one day. The use of stale
vegetables is known to have been the cause of serious illness.
Keeping
Vegetables—If necessary to keep green vegetables for any
length of time, do not put them in water, as that will dissolve and
destroy some of their juices; but lay them in a cool, dark place,—on a
stone floor is best,—and do not remove their outer leaves until needed.
They should be cooked the day they are gathered, if possible. The best
way to freshen those with the stems when withered is to cut off a bit
of the stem or stem-end, and set only the cut part in water. The
vegetables will then absorb enough water to replace what has been lost
by evaporation.
Peas and beans should not be shelled until wanted.
If,
however, they are not used as soon as shelled, cover them with pods and
put in a cool place.
Winter vegetables can be best kept wholesome by
storing in a
cool, dry place of even temperature, and where neither warmth,
moisture, nor light is present to induce decay or germination. They
should be well sorted, the bruised or decayed, rejected, and the rest
put into clean bins or boxes; and should be dry and clean when stored.
Vegetables soon absorb bad flavors if left near anything odorous or
decomposing, and are thus rendered unwholesome. They should be
looked over often, and decayed ones removed. Vegetables, to be kept fit
for food, should on no account be stored in a cellar with barrels of
fermenting pickle brine, soft soap, heaps of decomposing rubbish, and
other similar things frequently found in the dark, damp vegetable
cellars of modern houses.
Preparation
and Cooking.—Most vegetables need thorough washing before
cooking. Roots and tubers should be well cleaned before paring. A
vegetable brush or a small whisk broom is especially serviceable for
this purpose. If necessary to wash shelled beans and peas, it can best
be accomplished by putting them in a colander and dipping in and out of
large pans of water until clean. Spinach, lettuce, and other leaves may
be cleaned the same way.
Vegetables admit of much variety in preparation
for the table,
and are commonly held to require the least culinary skill of any
article of diet. This is a mistake. Though the usual processes employed
to make vegetables palatable are simple, yet many cooks, from
carelessness or lack of knowledge of their nature and composition,
convert some of the most nutritious vegetables into dishes almost
worthless as food or almost impossible of digestion. It requires no
little care and skill to cook vegetables so that they will neither be
underdone nor overdone, and so that they will retain their natural
flavors.
A general rule, applicable to all vegetables to be
boiled or
stewed, is to cook them in as little water as may be without burning.
The salts and nutrient juices are largely lost in the water; and if
this needs to be drained off, much of the nutriment is apt to be
wasted. Many cooks throw away the true richness, while they serve the
"husks" only. Condiments and seasonings may cover insipid taste, but
they cannot restore lost elements. Vegetables contain so much water in
their composition that it is not necessary to add large quantities for
cooking, as in the case of the grains and legumes, which have lost
nearly all their moisture in the ripening process.
Some vegetables are much better cooked without the addition of
water.
Vegetables to be cooked by boiling should be put
into boiling
water; and since water loses its goodness by boiling, vegetables should
be put in as soon as the boiling begins. The process of cooking should
be continuous, and in general gentle heat is best. Remember that when
water is boiling, the temperature is not increased by violent bubbling.
Keep the cooking utensil closely covered. If water is added, let it
also be boiling hot.
Vegetables not of uniform size should be so
assorted that
those of the same size may be cooked together, or large ones may be
divided. Green vegetables retain their color best if cook rapidly. Soda
is sometimes added to the water in which the vegetables are cooked, for
the purpose of preserving their colors, but this practice is very
harmful.
Vegetables should be cooked until they are
perfectly tender
but not overdone. Many cooks spoil their vegetables by cooking them too
long, while quite as many more serve them in an underdone state to
preserve their form. Either plan makes them less palatable, and likely
to be indigestible.
Steaming or baking is preferable for most
vegetables, because
their finer flavors are more easily retained, and their food value
suffers less diminution. Particularly is this true of tubers.
The time required for cooking depends much upon
the age and
freshness of the vegetables, as well as the method of cooking employed.
Wilted vegetables require a longer time for cooking than fresh ones.
Time
Required for Cooking.—The following is the approximate length
of time required for cooking some of the more commonly used vegetables:—
Potatoes, baked, 30 to 45 minutes.
Potatoes, steamed, 20 to 40 minutes.
Potatoes, boiled (in jackets), 20 to 25 minutes
after the
water is fairly boiling.
Potatoes, pared, about 20 minutes if of medium
size; if very
large, they will require from 25 to 45 minutes.
Green corn, young, from 15 to 20 minutes.
Peas, 25 to 30 minutes.
Asparagus, 15 to 20 minutes, young; 30 to 50 if
old.
Tomatoes, 1 to 2 hours.
String beans and shelled beans, 45 to 60 minutes
or longer.
Beets, boiled, 1 hour if young; old, 3 to 5 hours.
Beets, baked, 3 to 6 hours. Carrots, 1 to 2 hours.
Parsnips, 45 minutes, young; old, 1 to 2 hours.
Turnips, young, 45 minutes; old, 1-1/2 to 2 hours.
Winter squash, 1 hour. Cabbage, young, 1 hour;
old, 2 to 3
hours.
Vegetable oysters, 1 to 2 hours.
Celery, 20 to 30 minutes.
Spinach, 20 to 60 minutes or more.
Cauliflower, 20 to 40 minutes.
Summer squash, 20 to 60 minutes.
If vegetables after being cooked cannot be served
at once,
dish them up as soon as done, and place the dishes in a bain
marie or in pans of hot water, where they will keep of even
temperature, but not boil. Vegetables are never so good after standing,
but they spoil less kept in this way than any other. The water in the
pans should be of equal depth with the food in the dishes. Stewed
vegetables and others prepared with a sauce, may, when cold, be
reheated in a similar manner.
Bain
Marie.
If salt is to be used to season, one third of a
teaspoonful
for each pint of cooked vegetables is an ample quantity.
You
can also try Canning
Vegetables
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