Hand drawn image of Rhubarb

Rhubarb

Rheum rhabarbarum

With its distinctive shape and blush, green-tinged hue, rhubarb is one of our favourite flavours of the season. Its familiar to most once sweetened and stewed and served with custard or as the base for a crumble. However, its a truly versatile veg with its unique tang working as a foil when used as a sauce or preserve for fatty meats, oily fish or cheese. Its sharpness is its charm.

Image of Rhubarb being produced

In the kitchen

How to store Rhubarb

Store in the fridge, ideally in a bag as it loves moisture. It should last a week. The stalks might turn a little limp but they’ll still be good to use.

Prep & Cooking tips

To prepare rhubarb, give the stalks a wash, then trim off the top and bottom to tidy them up. Chop into batons or chunks, depending on your recipe. Make the pieces a similar size so they cook evenly, as rhubarb can go from firm to mushy in the blink of an eye.

The astringency will almost always need to be tempered with sweetness when cooking. The most common method is to stew it with sugar, orange juice and some aromatics such as vanilla or star anise. You can poach or roast it too; if you are gentle and attentive you can cook it while retaining its shape.

Although not strictly a fruit, the most common preparations are sweet and puddingy - but it also makes a great relish or sauce to go with fatty meats, oily fish or cheese.

Watch our Veg Hack below where our Field Kitchen mixologist, Gem, shows you how to make a uniquely refreshing roast rhubarb lemonade

Easy ideas

1. Roasted or poached

Cut the stalks into thick batons. Roast or poach gently in a sugar syrup (equal weights of sugar to water). If you time it right, it will hold its shape; cook for too long and it tends to collapse. The best trick is to cook it lightly until half done and then remove from the heat. It will finish cooking in the declining heat of the pan. Consider adding some orange juice and zest to the pan; maybe some aromatics such as vanilla, cinnamon, star anise or ginger.

2. Cocktails

Cook the rhubarb as above but overcook it until it breaks down. Blend it into a thick, sweet purée. For a summery rhubarb blini, load a champagne flute with a shot of purée and top up with fizz, stirring as you pour. You can pass the purée through a sieve to remove the pulp. The resulting syrup pairs well with gin, vodka or bourbon; muddled with plenty of crushed ice and mint for a sour smash. A raw baton makes a good swizzle stick; you can gnaw on it between sips to increase the sourness.

3. Relish

The sharpness of rhubarb can be harnessed in savoury dishes to cut through rich fatty foods. Try cooking some diced stalks down with vinegar, brown sugar and spices to make a relish. Balance with a pinch or two of salt. It works wonders with oily fish such as mackerel or with a fatty slices of roasted pork. It even marries well with a strong sharp cheddar as part of a cheese board.

Goes well with

Fruits (Strawberries, Apples, Citrus - particularly orange)

Warming spices (Ginger, Cinnamon, Star anise, Cardamom)

Aromatics (Rosewater, Orange blossom, Bay, Vanilla)

Dairy (Custard, Cream, Crème fraîche, Yogurt)

Sugar

Coconut

Mackerel, salmon or other oily fish

Pork or duck

Cheese - used as a relish

Spirits – a great cocktail ingredient, cooked or raw

Rhubarb recipes

View all Rhubarb recipes

In the field

  • Guy Watson-Singh picking wild garlic in the woods.

    Meet the grower: Guy Singh-Watson , Baddaford Farm, Devon

    Guy Singh-Watson is the founder of Riverford, and grew up on our own Wash Farm, Devon. These days, he also has his own farm just next door: Baddaford. On this 150-acre farm, nestled in a steep-sided valley, Guy and his team grow all sorts of organic fruit and veg for our boxes; from wild garlic in spring, to autumn squash.

  • Clive Martin of Bedlam Farm with a crop of rhubarb

    Meet the grower: Clive Martin , March, Cambridgeshire

    Clive Martin grows organic rhubarb, asparagus and more on Bedlam Farm in the Fenland area of Cambridgeshire, known for its rich, peaty soils.

UK seasonality

Stalks are pulled from late March to June or even later if the roots are strong.
jan
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apr
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dec

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