Super-high in fibre and vitamins and jam-packed with phytochemicals that help fight off disease, broccoli is one of the healthiest stars of the vegetable world. Read on to find out why.
October 9, 2015
Super-high in fibre and vitamins and jam-packed with phytochemicals that help fight off disease, broccoli is one of the healthiest stars of the vegetable world. Read on to find out why.
Packed into 250 millilitres (one cup) of broccoli:
Season
Broccoli is at its best and most abundant in mid-fall through the winter.
What to look for
Select dark green heads and leaves and bright green stems. The stalks holding the florets should be slender and crisp and the florets themselves tightly closed and uniformly green. Yellowed, flowering buds are a sign of old age and a toughness that longer cooking can't cure.
Storing
Keep in a plastic bag in the vegetable drawer of the refrigerator for three or four days.
Preparation
Basic cooking
Short cooking time brings out the best flavour and colour and helps prevent broccoli's valuable vitamins from leaching into the cooking water. It also prevents the breakdown of chemicals in broccoli that release strong-smelling sulfur compounds that smell like rotten eggs. Blanch, steam, sauté or stir-fry florets and chopped-up stems and leaves with a little added liquid for just three to five minutes.
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