How to clean and trim parsnips?
I have some parsnips, and recipe for them which said to:
Wash and scrape parsnips, and cut into 2 inch strips. Place into 2 inches of boiling water, and cook for 10 minutes, covered. Drain, add butter, salt and pepper as desired.
By "scrape", does the author want me to just clean of most of the dirt / color with a brush, or should I just peel the parsnips? Also, should I retain the core of the parsnip?
Best Answer
My grandmother scraped both her parsnips and her carrots. Basically you hold your knife perpendicular to the vegetable and drag it down the length. It's the same action as using a peeler. In fact, I usually just peel mine with a peeler. But scraping leaves a tiny bit more of the vegetable.
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How do you clean and cut parsnips?
Should you peel them? There's no right or wrong to peeling parsnips. Young/baby parsnips generally don't need peeling - just scrubbed clean in the same way as potatoes. Older parsnips with a softer skin (which tend to be flexible/limp) and those with a waxy coating should be peeled thinly.Do I need to peel parsnips before roasting?
Early-picked parsnips have tender cores that can be eaten, but as the season progresses, the cores get woodier, making it a good idea to remove them before cooking. To find out whether a parsnip has a tough core, halve it lengthwise and then push the tip of a paring knife through the core and into the flesh.How to Clean \u0026 Peel Parsnips Vegetables
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Answer 2
I generally peel parsnips like I would a carrot and then core them using this method:
After trimming the ends and peeling the parsnip, quarter it lengthwise. Hold a sharp paring >knife parallel to the cutting board and slowly run the knife between the core and the tender >outer part of the parsnip. The core curves with the shape of the parsnip, so you won’t be >able to get it all, but that’s fine—just remove as much as you can without sacrificing too >much of the tender part.
Before I knew better I would also just slice them like a carrot prior to boiling and mashing, and that works ok for smaller parsnips when the core isn't too tough/woody.
Answer 3
I use a vegetable peeler. I could use a knife, but I found I was losing a lot of parsnip that way. I also found that they really needed to lose that outer layer, texture wise, after washing and popping them in the pot one time. They were a bit... chewy.
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