American Cookery

American Cookery

Sections:

Cheese
Roots and Vegetables
Onions
Garlicks
Parsley
Raddish
Melons
Early Yorkshire
Beans
Site Map

Parsnips

Parsnips, are a valuable root, cultivated best in rich old grounds, and doubly deep plowed, _late sown_, they grow thrifty, and are not so prongy; they may be kept any where and any how, so that they do not grow with heat, or are nipped with frost; if frosted, let them thaw in earth; they are richer flavored when plowed out of the ground in April, having stood out during the winter, tho' they will not last long after, and commonly more sticky and hard in the centre.

_Carrots_, are managed as it respects plowing and rich ground, similarly to Parsnips. The yellow are better than the orange or red; middling fiz'd, that is, a foot long and two inches thick at the top end, are better than over grown ones; they are cultivated best with onions, sowed very thin, and mixed with other seeds, while young or six weeks after sown, especially if with onions on true onion ground.

They are good with veal cookery, rich in soups, excellent with hash, in May and June.

Google

Read Me On The .Net