In the kitchen
How to store Asparagus
Asparagus should always be be kept in the fridge and benefits immeasurably by being eaten as soon as possible at its fresh best. It will keep for several days, but if you haven’t devoured it in the first few days then standing it upright in a cup of water can help it last a while longer.
Prep & Cooking tips
You’ll need to trim away any tough stalk ends before cooking. The prescribed trick for this is to hold the spear at each end and gently, evenly bend until it snaps. However we think sometimes this removes a little more than required, so it is better to use a knife and trim at the point where you can feel the stalk starting to become tough and woody.
The spears will take 2-3 mins to boil or steam. They’ll roast in a hot oven if well-oiled in about 7-8 mins or yield to a griddle or BBQ in half that time. Try shaving them into thin ribbons with a swivel-top peeler and adding them raw to a salad.
If your asparagus is particularly thick, once you have cut off the woody ends, split the spears into halves or quarters lengthways to help speed the cooking process.
Watch our Veg Hack video below, where chef Bob looks at how to prepare and roast asparagus for a simple asparagus lunchtime treat.
Easy ideas
1. Roasted
You needn’t always steam or boil your spears. Oiled and seasoned, they will roast in a hot oven in about 8-10 mins; they’ll yield to a griddle or BBQ in half that time. Try throwing generous slices into a tray of roasting new potatoes for the final 10 mins, garnish with some thyme and crumbled sheep’s cheese. Try our recipe for roasted asparagus with hazelnut dressing.
2. Well dressed
At its simplest all you need is a little olive oil, lemon juice and a turn of pepper. Melted butter always ticks the box, but can be taken to another level if allowed brown a little to release some complex, nutty aromas. Try a simple vinaigrette, maybe laced with orange zest and coarsely chopped hazelnuts.
3. Eggs
Asparagus seems to strike a culinary chord with the humble egg in all its forms. Use it instead of toasted soldiers with a runny boiled egg. Attempt a daunting but delectable hollandaise sauce as a dip or dressing; a homemade mayo works well too, lifted with a little chopped garlic and anchovy.
Pile some roasted spears onto buttered toast, grate over a hardboiled egg and finish with a garnish of chopped parsley, capers and celery salt. For a simple dinner throw some cooked and chopped asparagus together with hot pasta, crispy bacon bits and a couple of egg yolks; the heat of the pasta should turn the yolks into a silken sauce, finish with parmesan.
Goes well with
Citrus (Orange, Lemon)
Nuts (Hazelnuts, Pine nuts)
Prosciutto and bacon
Butter
Mint
Mushrooms
New potatoes
Peas
Parmesan
Eggs
Asparagus recipes
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Asparagus with roast garlic alioli
Serves: 4 Total time: 50 min
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Asparagus and anchovy mayonnaise
Serves: 2 Total time: 10 min
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Asparagus and wootton dairy millstone frittata
Serves: 2 Total time: 25 min
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Raw asparagus and fennel salad
Serves: 2 Total time: 10 min
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BBQ grilled asparagus
Serves: 4 Total time: 15 min
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Caprese style asparagus
Serves: 6 Total time: 35 min
In the field
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Meet the grower: Jose 'Pepe' Aguilera , Huertas Bajas Farm, Loja, Spain
Jose 'Pepe' Aguilera runs Huertas Bajas Farm, supplying us with a wide range of organic produce - from delicate asparagus, to a vibrant range of baby salad leaves, and rich, fruity extra virgin olive oil from his 30 hectares of olives groves.
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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
In our boxes from early May to mid/late June - one of the first signs of spring.Asparagus varieties
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Asparagus
The most common asparagus; delicate, tender, and bursting with spring sweetness.
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Purple asparagus
These violet-hued stems have a sweet, delicate flavour and are tender enough to be eaten raw. Their handsome dark colouring is only skin deep; the flesh within is creamy pale green.
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White asparagus
Revered on the continent for its fatter spears and sweeter, delicate flavour. The difference is all in the growing: white asparagus is grown underground, preventing the spears from photosynthesising and going green.