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Salad leaves

Dan Saladino reports on the increasingly complex world of the simplest of foods, salad leaves.

It's boom time in the world of lettuce and salad leaves. More leafy greens were sold in the UK last year than ever before, and that upward trend looks set to continue - driven in particular by bags and bowls of pre-prepared leaves. In this edition of The Food Programme, Dan Saladino goes on a journey into this fast-changing world of leaves - from how they are grown and packaged, to the ongoing hunt for new leaves.
Dan discovers how one particular type of lettuce with roots in 19th-century America changed food forever, he encounters a man who travels the globe searching for the next 'hero leaf' - and learns secrets about preparing and growing.
Along the way he'll meet pioneering chefs René Redzepi and David Everitt-Matthias, US food writer Irene Sax, greengrocer Charlie Hicks, as well as gardener and writer Mark Diacono.

Available now

30 minutes

Last on

Mon 21 Jul 2014 15:30

5 leaves from David Everitt-Matthias

5 leaves from David Everitt-Matthias

5 Seasonal Leaves

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Wild Garlic; Found at spring time in woodlands in moist conditions. They can be found near bluebells. Garlic flavour, young leaves areÌýgood raw, larger leaves are good wilted or chopped.Ìý

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Cleavers; Again, a spring time leaf.ÌýTheyÌýgrow all over the place, near water , inÌýlonger grass on common land. The tips have a raw taste like freshly podded peas.

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Ox-Eye Daisy; Found in summer time growing by the roadside or inÌýmeadows. They look like massive daisies. The leaves go great with beetroot in salads because of their earthy beetroot taste.

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Wood Sorrel; Found in wooded areas and hedgerows in the spring, summer and autumn. The leaves have a wonderful kick of citrus due to the Oxalic acid. Great with fish and seafood.

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Woodruff; Late spring andÌýsummer.ÌýYou can findÌýit inÌýwooded areas.Wonderful, slightly almondy flavour when raw or used for infusing.

David is Chef Proprietor atÌýThe Champignon Sauvage in Chaltenham. He is also author of 'Essence'

David's Baby Gem salad

David's Baby Gem salad

ServesÌý4 PeopleÌý

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2ÌýÌýÌýÌýÌýÌý Baby Gem Lettuce

50gÌýÌý Olive Oil

50gÌýÌý Unsalted Butter

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1. Cut the little gems in half lengthways.

2. Heat the olive oil in a frying pan and place the lettuce in flat-side down.

3. Cook over a high heat until scorched. ( deep brown )

4. Remove from the pan. Place to one side.

5. Heat another pan with the water and the butter. Bring to the boil to create an emulsion and add the lettuce. Cook for 2-3 minutes until just cooked.

6. Season and serve.

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At the restaurant we place the lettuce halves under vacuum pressure to remove some of the water. This makes for a more concentrated toasty flavour. I am sure if you are friendly with your butcher and ask him nicely he will 'vac pac' it for you. You'd thenÌýkeep the leavesÌýlike this for 1-2 hours and then cook as above.

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In the photo,Ìýwe've used theÌýlettuce as part of a scallop dish served with pea puree, peas and roasted peanuts. But is also goes very well with barely cooked and chopped oystersÌýand fresh almonds.

Mark Diacono's Lettuce, pea and mint soup

Mark Diacono's Lettuce, pea and mint soup

Lettuce, pea and mint soup

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Lettuce soup is one of those peculiarly little made recipes that once made becomes a regular. Delicious hot or chilled, it is infinitely adaptable to whatever's in season - broad beans and dill, courgette and basil etc in place of the pea and mint. It's also a belter to have to call on when too many lettuces are ready at once or if some are going to seed. Using a light stock or water allows the flavour of the lettuce to stay up front.

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A generous knob of butter

4 spring onions - roughly sliced

400 grams of peas in the pod (or 160gms frozen peas) - ÌýpoddedÌý

Head of one lettuce (just beginning to bolt if you like) or the outer leaves from 2 to 3 lettuce - washed and roughly chopped.

200ml or so of vegetable stock or water

4 or 5 mint leavesÌý

Splash of cream

Salt and pepper



Method

Melt the butter on a low heat and add the peas, spring onion and lettuce, and cook gently until the lettuce has wilted well. ÌýAdd the water or stock and continue cooking gently for around 10 minutes. ÌýTake off the heat, add the mint leaves and allow to infuse for a few minutes while the soup cools a little. ÌýLiquidise thoroughly and return to the pan, warm, season to taste. Serve with a splash of cream, a dollop of yoghurt or a swirl of good olive oil.

Mark Diacono grows unusual and forgotten food at his smallholding Otter Farm. He is the author of 'A Taste of the Unexpected'.

4 leaves from Mark Diacono. Reine de Glace...

4 leaves from Mark Diacono. Reine de Glace...

Reine de GlaceÌý– a really wonderful crisphead lettuce. Think of it like an elegantly ragged iceberg but with so much more flavour and refinement. Very green, very crisp and very beautiful iceberg heads that have never failed me. A very old variety (200 years+) and one of the best.

...Australian Yellow Leaf & Lingua di Canarino...

...Australian Yellow Leaf & Lingua di Canarino...

Australian Yellow Leaf (foreground)Ìý–ÌýA large, open-headed lettuce with gorgeous bright green/yellow crinkled leaves, looks fabulous, is slow to bolt and takes well to cut-and-come-again harvesting. The texture is superb – firm and crunchy – and the flavour sweet and fine. Grow it with the deep red, Really Red Deer Tongue for a fabulous visual and flavour combination.

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Lingua di CanarinoÌý(background) – an oakleaf lettuce with a mild yet distinctive flavour, a good crisp texture and is very slow to bolt or turn bitter. A very hardy lettuce that does thrive into autumn and in cool areas.

...and Buttercrunch lettuce

...and Buttercrunch lettuce

Buttercrunch, along with Marvel of Four Seasons, is my favourite butterhead lettuce.While the outer leaves are soft and loose, the centre is crisp, so it’s almost two lettuces in one. The flavour is gentle and buttery. It’s slow to bolt and drought resistant too. Try it with just olive oil and salt, or use it as the base of a mixed salad.

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All leaves feature in A Year at Otter Farm, by Mark Diacono, published by Bloomsbury

Photography: Mark Diacono & Candida Diacono

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Dan Saladino
Interviewed Guest Rene Redzepi
Interviewed Guest David Everitt-Matthais
Interviewed Guest Irene Sax
Interviewed Guest Charlie Hicks
Interviewed Guest Mark Diacono
Producer Rich Ward

Broadcasts

  • Sun 20 Jul 2014 12:32
  • Mon 21 Jul 2014 15:30

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