Learn how to use every inch of this versatile vegetable. Makenna Held, the author of Mostly French and a cooking teacher based in France, didn’t always like fennel. She found it overpowering and ...
Fall salad with apples, Cheddar and crispy sage: Sage leaves fried in olive oil until they crackle and brown add an ...
Fennel's sweet, spiced flavor is perfect for elevating all kinds of recipes, no matter how it's served up. The bulbs can bring a crunchy, vegetal taste to salads, a tender finish to roasted meat, and ...
Jim Dixon wrote about food for WW for more than 20 years, but these days most of his time is spent at his olive oil-focused specialty food business Wellspent Market. Jim’s always loved to eat, and he ...
1. Heat a wide skillet or braiser over medium heat and add olive oil. 2. Add fennel and cumin seeds. Stir constantly to toast until just lightly golden brown. 3. Add diced onions and stir to ...
Whether consumed raw, as tea, or incorporated into your cooking, fennel seeds offer numerous benefits that promote a healthy digestive system.
Apart from flavor, cumin and fennel also provide health benefits. Cumin is known to help with digestion and boost metabolism ...
Fennel often belonging to the "grossly underutilized vegetables" tab, and it deserves much more praise and attention than it gets. It's one of those plants that can be eaten almost entirely, as the ...
Cookbook author Deborah Madison tells me fennel is in the carrot family. Its nicknames include bulb fennel, Florence fennel, and finocchio. Formally, it's Foeniculum vulgare var. Azoricum. Fennel, ...