Saturday 12 November 2016

The Parsnip - unsung hero of the Winter garden

I sometimes describe Parsnips as "Marmite" vegetables - you know, love 'em or hate 'em. Mention Parsnips and many people will cringe and say "Yuck, disgusting!". Significantly, few people who grow this vegetable have this opinion though, perhaps because they know how to treat it well.


A veg-gardener who didn't like Parsnips would probably not grow them. For a start, they look dull, with none of the colourful flamboyance of the Carrot (especially the trendy purple ones). The skins are often disfigured by the rusty scars of the disease canker. The foliage dies down before the vegetable is ready for harvesting, and can be brown, slimy and untidy. The Parsnip is seldom a good-looker (except in those ridiculously optimistic Seed Merchants' catalogues).


However, as a gardener I know that the external appearance of a vegetable is not necessarily a good guide to its taste or overall worth. The scabby skin of the Parsnip is easily peeled off to reveal glowing white flesh beneath - and of course this peeling also releases the gorgeous sweet aroma too. As a food-lover, I think one's opinion of the Parsnip is probably influenced primarily by how it had been cooked when you first encountered it. I would agree that a boiled Parsnip is often totally unattractive - soggy on the outside and with a tough core - and could easily put you off them for life, but a roasted Parsnip is a completely different proposition! Preferably cooked in Goose fat, of course. Maybe with a little drizzle of Maple syrup or honey, a few grinds of black pepper, a sprig or two of fresh Thyme...?

Roasted Parsnips and Potatoes

Curried Parsnip soup is another classic dish, and deservedly so, with the natural sweetness of the Parsnips providing an intriguing counterpoint to the fragrant curry spices. Sliced ultra-thin on a mandolin and then deep-fried to make crisps ("chips" to those of you in the USA) Parsnips become a much more upmarket snack than their boring potato cousins. I could go on. I like Parsnips!

As a gardener I also know that whilst Parsnips can sometimes be slow to germinate, once they get going they are generally trouble-free and easy to look after. Their powerful roots will push down easily 2 or 3 feet in search of moisture, and watering is therefore only necessary in times of real drought. Parsnip foliage too is seldom the subject of much insect attack. True, the leaf-miners often move in, but the damage they do is largely cosmetic.

Leaf-miner damage on Parsnip leaves

But for me, the best thing about Parsnips is that they deliver their crop in Winter, when other crops can be much less plentiful than in the warmer months. Furthermore, a Parsnip will remain in good condition for several months without significant deterioration. Sown in, say, April, they can be ready to harvest in October, but will quite happily wait until the following February or March. However, if you leave them too long (until after Spring begins in earnest), they will send up flower-stalks (they are biennial, after all) and will no longer be fit to eat.

These Parsnips were harvested on 20th February (2015)


Since I have said that the Parsnip is the hero of Winter, here are a couple of Winter-related tips:

1. If you are likely to want to dig up any of your Parsnips while there is snow on the ground, it's a good idea to mark where they are growing with some long sticks - one at each end of the row, and one at the point where you last dug (so presumably where you will dig next...)

2. Parsnips can be pretty difficult to dig up if they get big and put down long roots. This is exacerbated by frozen soil, so it might be a good idea to dig some before the soil freezes and store them in a box of sand. Keep the box outdoors or perhaps in an unheated shed.

3. Parsnip seeds do not germinate well in cold, wet soil, so it is best to sow them in late Spring, when the soil has warmed-up a bit. They don't remain viable very long either, and it is a good idea to use fresh seed every year and not rely on leftovers from previous packs.

15 comments:

  1. I love parsnips (what don't I love, foodwise ?)
    Would you believe when I was growing up our elderly neighbours would have parsnips in their veggie plot every single year and they hated the stuff !! Which was okay, my mum helped them get rid of it. Haha! They grew quite a few veg that they didn't eat too.

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  2. You have convinced me to have another go next year, I'm definitely one of the love 'em brigade but at my one attempt to grow them a few years ago I failed miserably. The tipping point convincing me was your suggestion of a drizzle of honey, that sounds wonderful. Ill let you know how I get on !

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  3. Parsnips, fantastic vegetable. Not a lot else to say really :)

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  4. You mean that there are people who actually dislike parsnips? I don't think there is anything unattractive about your parsnips.

    I do remember though not liking my first taste of parsnip which was down to the fact that I thought it was a potato and was shocked by the taste.

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  5. You are right. Roasted parsnips are tasty but I hate growing them because they are ugly, muddy, and cold. Guilty as charged ;)

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  6. I like an occasional parsnip but it has to be occasional. Roast ones, to my taste, tend to be a bit greasy - but I'd forgotten about curried parsnip soup . . . and that really is very good. (Used to bake parsnips wrapped in foil with garlic and butter - they're good that way too. (Though again, not too often!))

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  7. Love them ..... not going to dig mine up just yet though :)

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  8. Now that we've had our first frost we can dig our first parsnip of the year!

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  9. You're right, parsnips are definitely one of those veg like Marmite. Two of us in my family love them, the other two won't go near them with a barge pole. I could eat a plateful of them myself.

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  10. I love roasted parsnips and must after your recommendation try them in soup and try growing them again in the garden next year. Sarah x

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  11. Not a massive fan of them but they are essential in my winter garden. Wprth if for parsnip soup alone! I grew some for seed this year as well and got my girls to thress it, really interesting to grow biannual crops for seed!

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  12. I LOVE parsnips, LOVE LOVE LOVE them

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  13. Our little one loves parsnips, they have overtaken potatoes to become his favourite veg! We think they're pretty good too :)

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  14. Does parsnip leaf miner cause blisters? Trying to identity my issue

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    Replies
    1. Not so much blisters as tunnels in the leaves.

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