Join Culinate

With a free Culinate membership, you can:

  • Create your own recipe collections
  • Queue recipes for later use
  • Blog your culinary endeavors
  • Be part of our online community of cooks
  • And much more…
Join Now

Kohlrabi Salad with Pea Shoots

From the book The Farm to Table Cookbook by
Serves 6
Total Time 15 minutes

Introduction

Kohlrabi is a member of the odiferous brassica family (a cousin of cabbage), but it has a rather benign flavor, something like a cross between green cabbage and broccoli, yet milder and crisper. This recipe — from chef Fearn Smith of Portland’s Farm Café — should change your mind if you ever thought of kohlrabi as an “ick” vegetable.

Ingredients

2 large red or green kohlrabi bulbs
1 large carrot, peeled
1 tsp. fennel seeds
2 Tbsp. rice-wine vinegar
½ tsp. kosher salt
½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1 tsp. toasted sesame oil
2 cups pea shoots (optional)

Steps

  1. With a sharp chef’s knife, cut the tough outer skin and stems from the kohlrabi. Julienne the kohlrabi with a mandoline or sharp knife (you will have about 4 cups), and then julienne the carrot.
  2. Toast the fennel seeds in a small dry sauté pan over medium heat until they begin to brown slightly and smell toasty. Transfer them to a mortar and pestle or clean spice grinder and grind into a coarse powder.
  3. Combine the fennel powder, vinegar, salt, and pepper in a small bowl. Slowly whisk in the oils. Pour over the vegetables and toss to coat.
  4. Chop the pea shoots into 1-inch pieces and toss into the salad immediately before serving.

Notes

Kohlrabi is available almost year-round, but you’ll find it most often in late spring to early summer. Small to medium kohlrabi (no bigger than a fist) have the mildest flavor. If possible, buy them with the leaves still attached, as the leaves are tasty when cooked. Don’t buy kohlrabi with yellow or wilting leaves.

This content is from the book The Farm to Table Cookbook by Ivy Manning.

Subscribe
Comments
There are no comments on this item
Add a comment
Unrated
Rating

Think before you type

Culinate welcomes comments that are on-topic, clean, and courteous. For the benefit of the community we reserve the right to delete comments that contain advertising, personal attacks, profanity, or which are thinly disguised attempts to promote another website.

Please enter your comment

Format: Bare URLs are automatically linked; use this style: [http://www.example.com "place text to be linked here"] for prettier links. You may specify *bold* or _italic_ text. No HTML please.

Please identify yourself

Not a member? Sign up!

Please prove that you’re not a computer


Advertisement
Our Table

Egg-boiling essentials

Mark Bittman’s gone back to basics

In his new book, the fundamentals of cooking take center stage.

Subscribe
Graze: Bites from the Site
The Produce Diaries

Morels

Pleasure in the hunt

Dinner Guest Blog

A quiche lesson

The crux is the crust

Features

Fabulous favas

A green herald of summer

Dinner Guest Blog

Wabi-sabi cookery

Cooking is a constant history lesson

Editor’s Choice