The Money Mustache Community
Learning, Sharing, and Teaching => Ask a Mustachian => Topic started by: happy on February 20, 2019, 06:18:49 PM
-
I currently have an abundance of celery growing - mainly thin green stalks and leaves. Its far exceeding my current rate of general use.
Does anyone have a really great recipe?
-
I always save the celery tops & leaves & freeze them. Then I add them to homemade stock, soups and stews, the add a great flavour and I just take them out before serving.
-
That might be the easiest thing to do. I usually chop celery stalks into stock, but the leaves and ends should work too
-
I just add them to green salads and in any kind of wok dishes or soup. The tops can be put on top as garnish.
Maybe you can use them in a healthy smoothie?
-
The leaves are not dissimilar to parsley. I use them anywhere parsley is used, but usually they go into the scraps freezer bag to make stock later.
-
Dehydrate it, blitz it up and make celery salt
-
I'm planning on making Ina Garten's celery salad this week:
https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/ina-garten/celery-and-parmesan-salad-recipe-2102575
-
Sounds very nice Better Change. Being my home grown celery ( ie lots of leaves and thinstalks and almost no heart/broad stalks) I won't have celery hearts so I won't be able to replicate it, but I might use the ideas in a salad somewhere.
Thanks everyone for the ideas. At the very least I will freeze some for use in stocks/soups/stews etc.
-
I've always just added to salads, but it looks like you have more than that would require.
-
I think I've had a Greek porc fricassee similar to this where they just keep all the leaves.
https://www.littlecookingtips.com/content/greek-pork-and-celery-stew-hirino-me-selino
-
I like Brightfire's idea. If you don't have a dehydrator, you can always pull just the leaves, wash them, dry them off, then leave them in a dish in the fridge for a couple of weeks - they'll dry to a crisp, perfect for later use. I dry mint this way, sometimes accidentally.
But generally, I'll use celery leaves in, or as a garnish on, chicken soup. Clove, celery, and chicken go so well together.
-
Would the leaves work to make a pesto? We've done that with carrot greens and radish greens and some other greens before, but never celery greens. Just put it in a food processor with some salt and nuts and a generous amount of olive oil, and you might have a nice pasta sauce.
-
Mix into tuna or chicken salad.
Use it in green soup (Google splendid tables recipe)
As a pp mentioned, it's similar to parsley, so you might be able to make a chimichurri.
-
I've been eating a sort-of waldorf salad for years, and I prefer it with leafy celery to chunky hearts:
Chop celery (if the stems are woody, don't include them -- save them for one of the other ideas) cube apples of a type you like. Add walnuts, and dried cranberries or cherries. Dress with a sherry vinaigrette (good olive oil, sherry vinegar, salt, maybe a dot of mustard, maybe some thyme). Add crumbles of blue cheese (I like blue cheese! -- if you don't, maybe try goat cheese?)
As a chopped salad, it'll keep for a few days, so I make heroic quantities and eat them for several lunches in a row. If you like mayo, you could also try a more traditional waldorf salad recipe -- maybe dress with ranch or thinned-down mayo?
-
If you really have a lot, you can also saute them and serve them as a vegetable, in the same way you do spinach (though with a very different flavour, of course).