FabulousFusionFood's Edible Flower Guide for Nasturtium Home Page

Nasturtium flowers Nasturtium, Tropaeolum spp flowers..
Welcome to the summary page for FabulousFusionFood's Edible Flowers guide to Nasturtium along with all the Nasturtium containing recipes presented on this site, with 7 recipes in total.

This is a continuation of an entire series of pages that will, I hope, allow my visitors to better navigate this site. As well as displaying recipes by name, country and region of origin I am now planning a whole series of pages where recipes can be located by meal type and main ingredient. This page gives a listing of all the Cornish recipes added to this site.

These recipes, all contain Nasturtium as a major edible flower.

The Nasturtium Tropaeolum spp represents a genus of about 80 species of annual and perennial herbaceous flowering plants in the Tropaeolaceae (nasturtium) family. A native of South and Central America, the name literally means 'nose-tweaker' which have now been spread world-wide as popular garden flowers.

The various nasturtium species have showy, often intensely bright flowers and rounded, peltate (shield-shaped) leaves with the petiole in the centre. The flowers have five petals (sometimes more), a three-carpelled ovary, and a funnel-shaped nectar tube in the back. All parts of the plant are edible. The flower has most often been consumed, making for an especially ornamental salad ingredient; it has a slightly peppery taste reminiscent of watercress, and is also used in stir fry. The unripe seed pods can be harvested and pickled with hot vinegar, to produce a condiment and garnish, sometimes used in place of capers, although the taste is strongly peppery. The mashua (T tuberosum) produces an edible underground tuber that is a major food source in parts of the Andes.

In culinary usage, nasturtium flowers are typically used to decorate salads or are stuffed as starters and/or garnishes. Nasturtium flowers are also truly delicious. They have a wonderfully spicy, peppery flavour, a little like a radish, only sweeter and tangier.



The alphabetical list of all recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 7 recipes in total:

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Nasturtium Soup
     Origin: American
Nasturtiums with Cream Cheese and
Almond Filling

     Origin: Britain
Wild Rocket, Nasturtium and Herb Salad
     Origin: Britain
Nasturtium Vinaigrette
     Origin: American
Red-red with Spiced Plantains
     Origin: Ghana
Nasturtium Vinegar
     Origin: American
Stuffed Nasturtiums
     Origin: American

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