You're either a rhubarb person or you're not. We rhubarb people know we are special―as special and unique as the slender stalks of the pinkish-reddish pie plant. If you have a rhubarb plant, you know ...
When I was growing up, I remember my dad always growing rhubarb in his summer garden, but in a separate area so it could really spread out. My mom would make our favorite custard pie or warm sauce for ...
Mix rhubarb, sugar and tapioca. Let stand 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Pour into greased 9x13-inch baking pan. Combine brown sugar, quick oats, flour and salt. Cut in butter until mixture ...
When it comes to rhubarb, now available locally, things are not always what they seem. We think of it as a fruit (but it’s actually related to sorrel and buckwheat). We refer to its edible stalks, ...
Turn tangy rhubarb into delightful sweet-tart treats and dinners with these well-loved recipes. We’ve rounded up the rhubarb recipes EatingWell readers visit the most, so you can enjoy anything from a ...
We’ve successfully reached the time of year when we mark its passage not just by the calendar, but by the growing season. Now, it’s rhubarb time. Memories of rhubarb are threaded through the lives of ...
There are certain columns you have to do every year. There’s the Thanksgiving turkey column in November followed by the Christmas cookie column a month later. There are columns about tailgating in ...
We put in a new front yard a couple of weeks ago, complete with drought-tolerant plantings, decomposed granite walkways and a “water feature” (apparently, nobody says “fountain” anymore). Of course, ...
Rhubarb may be botanically a vegetable, but it is legally a fruit, as ruled by the U.S. Customs Court in Buffalo, N.Y., in 1947. Whatever you want to classify it, rhubarb bridges the gap between ...