"Not one of flora's brilliant race
A form more perfect can display;
Art could not feign more simple grace
Nor nature take a line away."
From "On Planting a Tulip-Root"
James Montgomery 1771-1854

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TULIP TUNA
~ from Edible Flowers (Cathy Wilkinson Barash)
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12 brightly colored 'pesticide free' tulips (reds, yellows, oranges or multicolored are preferable)
2 drained cans albacore tuna packed in water
4 chopped stalks of celery
1 tsp. curry powder
1/3 cup mayonnaise
lettuce
- Remove petals from 8 of the tulips, cutting off 1/4 inch where petal was attached (this can be bitter).
- Julienne petals. In a large bowl, mix tuna, celery, curry and mayonnaise. Add julienned petals and gently toss.
- Cut off stems and remove the pistils and stamens from the 4 preserved tulips. Lay each tulip on a bed of lettuce. Gently spoon tuna mixture into the tulips. (This is also good with your favorite chopped chicken salad recipe.)
NOTE: Though 'pecticide-free' tulip petals are edible (never eat the bulb), some people have allergic reactions, which vary from species to species, producing a rash or numbness. Unless highly allergic, a few petals should be harmless. Stuffed tulips make a beautiful presentation. Do not eat flowers from the side of the road, florists or garden centers.
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April garden tulips
Comments
Breathtaking Tulips to admire and cook with.
Joey, mi querida amiga, your talent is limitless!
Love seeing all the happy little heads...
Enjoy the spring!
Lovin the sunshine!
xoxo~Kathy @
Sweet Up-North Mornings...
But I have never heard of eating tulips, but it is worth a try. Friends from Alaska this weekend were taken aback when I talked about sauteing radish leaves. Hope you are having a wonderful week
Frances
I thought tulips were poisonous, because of the bulbs, I guess. Very interesting to learn the blooms are edible.
Marnie
Kiki~
Thanks, Kathy! Keep that sunshine goin' ... we're
heading north tomorrow :)
Hi Diana and thanks! Love garnishing and cookin' with edible flowers. Mr. Ho-Hum, my sous-chef, insists those on the plate 'must be' tasted :)
OK not to eat, dear Frances :) It's like when I cook with daylilies, luckily, I have hundreds yet Mr. Ho-Hum hates to pluck. Edible flowers aren't for everyone but fun to taste ... an experience! But ... if you lived near ... after our fun 'together' photo shoot ... hum ... perhaps :)
Thanks, Marnie. Don't eat the bulbs, only the blooms! I have been 'into' edible flowers for many years. Besides using fresh herbs, flowers are a fun/beautiful dining experience, making a simple supper 'something special'.
Hi CVF! Yes, tulips are edible as is the violet in your last lovely post. Salads, sprinkled with edible flowers, are wonderful. The photo you are referring to is actually a mix of 2 favorites ... one, the double and must have favorites, Mount Tacoma or Angelique, and the other is a Darwin, 'Apricot Beauty', I believe.
Thank you, dear Kiki, who always keeps us focused on the true gifts of life.
I didn't know tulip petal were edible. The grands and I were talking about edible flowers last week. I will have to tell them about tulips. Sounds very interesting.
Eileen
Thanks Phillip! Hey, good luck on that photo :)
Thanks Eileen, I totally understand :) For years I prepared (and loved) ... escargot ... that is until I became a gardener! Although I prepare caviar for guests, I don't like it. One of my favorite foods is a simple soft boiled/poached egg.
hope you will slow down and enjoy.
happy april.
Hi Scott and thanks. I'm a huge fan of tulips and always amazed how each flower is so unique.
I've got Tulip Mania and got it bad, Rick! I can't imagine my spring garden without this beauty.
Hugs and thanks, dear Kala!
I hate planting fall bulbs, Marmee, but so grateful in the spring! Off to the lake today for a dinner party with friends and to, hopefully, wash windows then back to the garden, big time, next week. Happy weekend :)
Always a dear friend, I thank you, Nancy. Spring has been most kind :)
Hello dear Gail! We had some unseasonably warm weather where the tulips popped and pooped too fast but delighted to have a second wave to enjoy, especially now that temps have cooled down. Thanks dear friend ... we both enjoy so many common delights.
Thank you, Dirty GG. Spring gardens are a joy well worth the wait :)
Thanks, Robin. You well remember Michigan weather and how we wait patiently for spring and all these lovely faces to greet us :)
I still remember your post about the history of tulips in the Netherlands; it was the first time I'd heard about their rich history...no pun intended:)
Thanks Rob ... I can't think of anything lovelier than cookin' you dinner (and, of course, we'll have plenty of wine)!
Kaleidoscopes still fascinate me too, Shady, and perhaps why I so love these tulips. Oh happy spring!