When you want to serve an unusual dish from the microwave oven, consider a relatively unknown vegetable such as Jerusalem artichokes. A species of sunflower that produces underground tubers, the ...
It's either feast or famine when it comes to my obtaining Jerusalem artichokes, also known as sunchokes or tompinambours. I sent my husband to the supermarket to get some gingerroot and he came home ...
Greg Hutchins of Heritage Farm in Carroll County just finished his first year of growing Jerusalem artichokes. These knobby tubers are also known as sunchokes, a name that was coined by Frieda’s ...
In this video, I give you my 5 top tips on how to grow a ton of Jerusalem artichoke or sunchokes in just one raised garden bed or container. Self Sufficient Me is based on our small 3-acre ...
My cold-weather comfort food is any root vegetable roasted, sautéed or mashed. Carrots, beets and sweet potatoes get the most attention. However, it was a recent purchase of Jerusalem artichokes from ...
If you’re lucky enough to grow Jerusalem artichokes at home, you can make this salad with a quick garden forage - Matt Austin I love making a dish without needing to go shopping – I’m lucky enough to ...
I have been coveting my neighbor’s Jerusalem artichokes. Members of the sunflower family, they fill a sunny part of her yard bounded by an old stone wall. They’re beautiful; bright yellow, tall and ...
The Jerusalem artichoke is neither an artichoke nor is it from Jerusalem but it is a tuber that looks similar to ginger roots, with light brown skin which may be tinged with yellow, red, or purple ...
CANTON Jerusalem artichokes aren't artichokes and they don’t come from Jerusalem. So, what are those knobby lumps with the exotic name? First, Jerusalem artichokes are a tuber of a plant related to ...
Oddly, Jerusalem artichokes have nothing to do with the city or the plant. Instead these knobby delicacies, also called sunchokes, are the tuber of a North American sunflower. Originally cultivated by ...