It's almost May! Finally my Home Gardener's Cookbook (Marjorie Page Blanchard, 1974) has more than advice on what to plant in the future accompanied by two or three recipes for whatever random things may be available in a mostly-barren landscape. The chapter starts with asparagus recipes. Blanchard is enchanted by how quickly the vegetable can grow, noting, "One day we see an inch of purple top showing. Two days later we pick enough to fill an omelet. And soon there is enough for the first real meal, with the name 'Spring' on it...." The book makes various recommendations that don't merit a full recipe (such as "The stalks are handsome on pieces of anchovy-buttered toast sprinkled with lemon butter and a bit of sieved egg yolk"), but I wanted to include a full recipe, so here is Asparagus Pudding. (I kind of doubt this is "handsome.")
Luckily, it's not a sweet pudding (though I do have a recipe for asparagus cake if that's your thing). Instead, it's a savory custard filled with asparagus and butter-browned breadcrumbs, topped with a few chives.
Rhubarb is also sneaking up into the world by May, so the book offers a fairly standard rhubarb and strawberry pie. I thought I would go with this more unusual offering, though.
Blanchard claims to have made up this recipe in a year when she was "especially flooded with rhubarb"-- I guess with more than she could fit into a multitude of desserts. If you're the type who likes fruit-and-meat combos, maybe this sounds good-- like a riff on orange chicken?
And of course, herbs start popping up in the spring too! One of the best ways to use them up might be in Tabbouli.
I'd sub in another fresh herb (maybe cilantro) for the onion and use canned tomato in place of the fresh (because I am contrary, if nothing else!), but I love that this is a more herb-heavy variation than the bulgur-heavy kind Americans often make. It definitely says spring is here! And it's a more family-friendly way of greeting spring than singing "First of May." (But hey, if you see the lady who sells ice cream or the man with the tan Shar Pei, tell them I'm over here if they're interested.)





































