Rhubarb, one of the few well known perennial vegetables.
Common Name: Rhubarb
Scientific Name: Rheum species
Family: Polygonaceae (the Knotweed, Smartweed, Buckwheat family)
The large leaves are a great biomass accumulator
Common Species:
- Himalayan Rhubarb (Rheum australe)
- Sikkim Rhubarb (Rheum nobile)
- Turkey or Chinese Rhubarb (Rheum palmatum)
- Da Huang (Rheum palmatum tanguticum)
- False Rhubarb (Rheum rhaponticum)
- Common Rhubarb (Rheum rhabarbarum)
- Garden Rhubarb (Rheum x cultorum or Rheum x hybridum)
Remember, only the stalks (aka petioles) are edible
Description:
Rhubarb, along with Asparagus, is one of the more well known perennial vegetables. The large green leaves and red stalks were once a very common site in the home garden. Nowadays, there are probably more people who have heard of this vegetable than have eaten it, although the sour leaf stalks are still commonly used in pies (typically mixed with berries and lots of sugar) or in jams (also with lots of sugar). Few people in the U.S. have eaten Rhubarb as a vegetable as they do in Asia, and even fewer people have eaten the immature flower buds like cauliflower.
Rheum rhaponticum
History:
Almost all of the nearly 60 species of Rhubarb are used for food, medicine, or both. Originally from Asia, and grown for thousands of years, Rhubarb has been distributed around the world.
Trivia:
- Most commonly found Rhubarb have red stems, but there are a number of varieties (and other Rheum species) that have green or pink stems.
- Rheum palmatum is a large plant that can reach 6-10 feet tall and reportedly has a gooseberry-flavored stalk
- Rheum australe is reported to have an apple-flavored stalk.
Definitely not your grandmother's strawberry-rhubarb pie!
Dried Rhubarb - after it has been soaked in apple juice
USING THIS PLANT
Primary Uses:
- Edible Stalks – very tart. Typically cooked, but some eat them raw. In the United States, Rhubarb is cooked like a tart fruit in pies and jams, with the addition of a lot of sweetener (sugar, honey, etc.), while in Asia, Rhubarb is eaten as a vegetable similar to celery and can be used in soups and stews. Rhubarb stalks have been candied as well.
- Edible Flower Buds – cooked; similar in texture to cauliflower, but very tart.
- NOTE: due to the high amounts of oxalic acid in this plant, Rhubarb should be eaten in moderation. So what does this mean in real life? Don’t eat Rhubarb with every meal for a week. Oxalic acid inhibits the body from absorbing calcium. Over time, this can be harmful. However, considering its tartness, excessive consumption is unlikely.
Secondary Uses:
- Pioneer Plant Species
- Groundcover – plant larger species (Rheum palmatum) at 4 feet (1.2 meters); plant other species at 2.5 feet (0.8 meters)
- Dynamic Accumulator
- Biomass – on the small scale, but the leaves are not eaten, so use them for compost
- Insecticide Plant – simmering leaves in hot water yields an insecticide solution (I can find no recipes or application instructions)
- Dye Plant – some species leaves, stalks, and roots can be used to make yellow to red dyes.
Yield: Depends on the species, variety, growing conditions, and harvesting techniques.
Harvesting: Spring – Early Summer. Cut or twist off the leafstalk. Make sure to avoid the roots and the leaves. By mid to late Summer, the oxalic acid content has climbed, and even the stalks should be avoided or at least eaten in very limited quantity. Many people, mainly commercial growers, will harvest all the stems at once. This likely puts undue stress on the plant and encourages it to go to seed. Instead, remove no more than about a third of the stalks at one time and only mature stalks; harvest the next batch of now mature stalks a few weeks later. This method will also extend the harvesting season. It is time to stop harvesting once the stalks get thin.
Storage: Eat, cook, or process right away. Fully mature stalks will keep in a cool dry place (like a refrigerator) for a few days. Stalks can be frozen as well; pre-cutting and pre-measuring will make using them easier.
Rhubarb can be used as a ground cover since those large leaves shade out weeds
DESIGNING WITH THIS PLANT
USDA Hardiness Zone:
Himalayan Rhubarb (Rheum australe): 5-8
Sikkim Rhubarb (Rheum nobile): 7-9
Turkey or Chinese Rhubarb (Rheum palmatum): 4-7
False Rhubarb (Rheum rhaponticum): 3
Common Rhubarb (Rheum rhabarbarum): 3-8
Garden Rhubarb (Rheum x cultorum or Rheum x hybridum): 1-9
AHS Heat Zone: Garden Rhubarb (Rheum x cultorum or Rheum x hybridum): 8-5
Chill Requirement: No reliable information available.
Plant Type: Herbaceous Perennial
Leaf Type: Deciduous
Forest Garden Use: Herbaceous Layer
Cultivars/Varieties: Many species and many, many varieties available.
Pollination: Self-Pollinating/Self-Fertile. Pollinated by wind.
Flowering: Summer
Life Span:
Years to Begin Bearing: Rubarb will put out stems right away, but they should not be harvested the first year. A few can be harvest the second year.
Years to Maximum Bearing: 3-4 years is when you can start harvesting in earnest
Years of Useful Life: 10-15 years if not divided. If divided, the plant will live indefinitely.
Not many know that Rhubarb's flower buds can be eaten like cauliflower
If not eaten, the flower buds will bloom in shades of white, pink, or red
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THIS PLANT
Size: 3-5 feet (0.9-1.5 meters) tall and wide for R. x cultorum, other species are larger.
Roots: Fibrous and Deep (Rheum nobile has a root that can get to 7 feet (2 meters) long)
Growth Rate: Fast
The almost otherworldly Sikkim Rhubarb, Rheum nobile
The apple-flavored Himalayan Rhubarb, Rheum australe
The large Turkish Rhubarb, Rheum palmatum, has a gooseberry flavor
GROWING CONDITIONS FOR THIS PLANT
Light: Prefers full sun
Shade: Tolerates light shade
Moisture: Medium
pH: most species prefer fairly neutral soil (6.1 - 7.0)
Special Considerations for Growing:
- Being hardy to Zone 1, Rhubarb is one of the most cold hardy perennial vegetables available.
- If you live in areas warmer than Zone 7, consider growing Rhubarb as a Winter annual or consider growing a more heat tolerant species (Rheum palmatum, Rheum nobile).
- The garden varieties are great for gardens and good soil, but consider some of the other species if you are planning on using Rhubarb as a pioneer species or planting in soil that is less than ideal.
Propagation:
Usually by division in Spring. Can be planted from seeds, but seeds do not always produce plants similar to their parents (not true to type) – seeds do not require cold stratification.
Maintenance:
- Almost none. Very resistant to pests and disease.
- Crowns should be divided while dormant (either late Autumn or early Spring) every 4-5 years.
- Consider composting the leaves and stalks that dry up at the end of the season
Concerns:
Poisonous – Leaves and roots are toxic. There is a high amount of oxalic acid in the leaves, but it is likely the presence of an unknown glycoside that is the cause of its toxicity, not the oxalic acid.
Great post! I didn't know that the flowers are edible. I'll have to make up some rhubarb schnaps this summer. My dad has been making rhubarb wine for the past few years and he gets better and better at it. This year's batch is really good.
ReplyDeleteExcellent post, I have been looking for a good breakdown on the various species of rhubarb...can't wait to try drying the stalks after soaking in apple juice.
ReplyDeleteThis is extraordinary information... Well needed for experiments for my youth, self and family.
ReplyDeleteGreat post! Do you have any information on what it mines the soil for as a dynamic accumulator (I didn't see it in your hyperlinked list)?
ReplyDeleteI'm trying rhubarb as a biomass shade maker for under my new apple tree. Hoping it will be a good companion.
ReplyDeleteAnyone know?
I started from the new site, so I guess this isn't updated yet. I have rhubarb to add to my beginning garden/food forest. A particular recipe for the insecticide was to boil 1 cup of rhubarb leaves in 6.5 cup of water for 20-30 minutes, strain, and add 1/4 cup of dish soap or soap particles. As the soap is a surfactant, that seems too much for me. A teaspoon? If adding calcium bearing foods (like yogurt) to oxalate containing foods (like rhubarb or spinach) can cause precipitation of calcium oxalate, I would think that boiling the rhubarb leaves in hard water is going to precipitate a lot more. While the heart is dependent on calcium to function, I don't know where the stories about the oxalate stopping your heart come from. Oxalates are more a problem for the kidney. PubChem at NIH has some information on decomposition in the context of the insecticide. Or at least they do on the oxalic acid component. Oxalic acid is broken down by photolysis, and the expected lifetime of oxalic acid on a soil surface is typically a few to several hours. It is entirely possible that compounds other than oxalic acid are responsible for any efficacy as an insecticide.
ReplyDeleteIn looking into the above, I ran across a neat usage for various kinds of seedlings. Take a rhubarb leaf and partly cut the central vein. You can now wrap the seedling at ground level with the rhubarb leaf, providing some insect protection.
توحيد نمط الأثاث
ReplyDeleteعند اختيار قطع الأثاث المُناسبة وقبل البدء بتصميم القطع وتنسيق مواقعها يُفضّل اختيار نمط تصميمي موحد لكافة أرجاء المنزل، بحيث يكون الأثاث في كلّ غرفة أو منطقة متناسقة مع باقي الغرف والمناطق في المنزل، إذ يُفضّل أن يكون كامل أثاث المنزل بكلّ غرفه على النمط الكلاسيكي أو النمط الحديث على سبيل المثال، ممّا يجعل التصميم مُريح للرؤية، ولا يشعر الشخص بالفوضى من كثرة أنماط التصميم، كما أنّ ذلك يُتيح نقل قطع الأثاث من مكان إلى آخر، أي يُمكن استخدام قطع أثاث غرفة المعيشة في غُرفة النوم.
نجار بالرياض
شركة تركيب اثاث ايكيا بالرياض
فني دش بالرياض
نجار فك تركيب غرف نوم بالرياض
شركة تركيب ستائر بالرياض
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