- Leek
Taxobox
name = Leek
image_width = 250px
regnum =Plant ae
divisio = Magnoliophyta
classis =Liliopsida
ordo =Asparagales
familia =Alliaceae
genus = "Allium "
species = "A. ampeloprasum"
subspecies = "A. ampeloprasum" var. "porrum"
trinomial = "Allium ampeloprasum" var. "porrum"
trinomial_authority = (L.) J.GayThe leek , "Allium ampeloprasum" var. "porrum" (L.), also sometimes known as "Allium porrum", is a vegetable which belongs, along with theonion andgarlic , to the "Alliaceae " family. Two related vegetables, theelephant garlic andkurrat , are also variantsubspecies of "Allium ampeloprasum ", although different in their uses as food.The edible part of the leek plant is sometimes called a stem, though technically it is a bundle of leaf sheaths.
Form
Rather than forming a tight bulb like the onion, the leek produces a long cylinder of bundled leaf sheaths which are generally blanched by pushing soil around them (trenching). They are often sold as small seedlings in flats which are started off early in
greenhouse s, to be planted out as weather permits. Once established in the garden, leeks are hardy; many varieties can be left in the ground during the winter to be harvested as needed.Cultivars
Leek cultivars can be subdivided in several ways, but the most common types are "summer leeks", intended for harvest in the season when planted, and overwintering leeks, meant to be harvested in the spring of the year following planting. Summer leek types are generally smaller than overwintering types; overwintering types are generally more strongly flavored.
Growing
Leeks are easy to grow from seed and tolerate standing in the field for an extended harvest. Leeks usually reach maturity in the autumn months, and they have few pest or disease problems. Leeks can be bunched and harvested early when they are about the size of a finger or pencil, or they can be thinned and allowed to grow to a much larger mature size.
Hilling leeks can produce better specimens.Cuisine
The edible portions of the Leek are the white onion base and light green stalk. The onion-like layers form around a core. The tender core may be eaten, but as the leek ages the core becomes woody and better replanted than eaten. Leeks are an essential ingredient of cock-a-leekie, Leek and
Potato Soup andvichyssoise . They can also be used raw in salads, doing especially well when they are the prime ingredient.Because of their symbolism in
Wales (see below), they have come to be used extensively in that country's cuisine, while in the rest of Britain leeks have only come back into favour in the last fifty years or so, having been overlooked for several centuries [Jane Grigson , "Jane Grigson's Vegetable Book", (Penguin Books, 1978, ISBN 0140468595) p 291] .Historical consumption
Dried specimens from archaeological sites in
ancient Egypt , as well as wall carvings and drawings, led Zohary and Hopf to conclude that the leek was a part of the Egyptian diet "from at least the 2nd millennium B.C. onwards." They also allude to surviving texts that show it had been also grown in Mesopotamia from the beginning of the 2nd millennium B.C. [Daniel Zohary and Maria Hopf, "Domestication of plants in the Old World", third edition (Oxford: University Press, 2000),p. 195] The leek was the favorite vegetable of the EmperorNero , who consumed it most often in soup.Cultural Significance
The leek is one of the
national emblem s ofWales , whose citizens wear it - or thedaffodil - onSt. David's Day . According to one legend, King Cadwaladr of Gwynedd ordered his soldiers to identify themselves by wearing the vegetable on their helmets in an ancient battle against theSaxons that took place in a leek field. This story may have been made up by the English poetMichael Drayton , but it is known that the leek has been a symbol of Wales for a long time;Shakespeare , for example, refers to the custom of wearing a leek as an "ancient tradition" in Henry V. In the play, Henry tellsFluellen that he is wearing a leek "for I am Welsh, you know, good countryman". The 1985 and 1990British One Pound coin s bear the design of a leek in acoronet , representing Wales.Perhaps most visibly however is the leek's use as the
Cap badge of theWelsh Guards , aRegiment within theHousehold Division of theBritish Army .ee also
*
Wild leek , also known as ramps
*Laukaz , arune that has been speculated to mean "leek"
*Leekspin
*List of vegetables
*Culture of Wales Notes
External links
* [http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=ALAM Allium ampeloprasum L.] on US National PLANTS Database
* [http://plants.usda.gov/java/profile?symbol=ALPO2 Allium porrum L.] on US National PLANTS Database
* [http://www.floridata.com/ref/A/alli_amp.cfm Allium ampeloprasum, Porrum] on Floridata
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/pfaf/cgi-bin/arr_html?Allium+porrum Leek] : Plants For a Future database
* [http://www.foodmuseum.com/leek.html Food Museum page]
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