Rhubarb

For other uses, see Rhubarb (disambiguation).
Rhubarb
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
(unranked): Angiosperms
(unranked): Eudicots
(unranked): Core eudicots
Order: Caryophyllales
Family: Polygonaceae
Genus: Rheum
Species: R. rhabarbarum
Binomial name
Rheum rhabarbarum
L.
Rhubarb, raw
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy 88 kJ (21 kcal)
4.54 g
Sugars 1.1 g
Dietary fiber 1.8 g
0.3 g
0.8 g
Vitamins
Thiamine (B1)
(2%)

0.02 mg

Riboflavin (B2)
(3%)

0.03 mg

Niacin (B3)
(2%)

0.3 mg

(2%)

0.085 mg

Vitamin B6
(2%)

0.024 mg

Folate (B9)
(2%)

7 μg

Choline
(1%)

6.1 mg

Vitamin C
(10%)

8 mg

Vitamin E
(2%)

0.27 mg

Vitamin K
(28%)

29.3 μg

Trace metals
Calcium
(9%)

86 mg

Iron
(2%)

0.22 mg

Magnesium
(3%)

12 mg

Manganese
(9%)

0.196 mg

Phosphorus
(2%)

14 mg

Potassium
(6%)

288 mg

Sodium
(0%)

4 mg

Zinc
(1%)

0.1 mg


Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA Nutrient Database

Rhubarb (Rheum rhabarbarum) is a species of plant in the family Polygonaceae. It is a herbaceous perennial growing from short, thick rhizomes. It produces large leaves that are somewhat triangular, with long fleshy petioles. and small flowers grouped in large compound leafy greenish-white to rose-red inflorescences.

In culinary use, fresh raw petioles (leaf stalks) are crisp (similar to celery) with a strong, tart taste. Most commonly, the plant's leaf stalks are cooked with sugar and used in pies and other desserts. A number of varieties have been domesticated for human consumption, most of which are recognised as Rheum x hybridum by the Royal Horticultural Society.

Rhubarb is usually considered a vegetable. In the United States, however, a New York court decided in 1947 that since it was used in the United States as a fruit, it counted as a fruit for the purposes of regulations and duties. A side effect was a reduction on imported rhubarb tariffs, as tariffs were higher for vegetables than fruits.[1]

Rhubarb contains anthraquinones including rhein, and emodin and their glycosides (e.g. glucorhein), which impart cathartic and laxative properties. It is hence useful as a cathartic in case of constipation.[2]

Cultivation

Rhubarb displayed for sale at a market in Leeds, England.

Rhubarb is grown in many areas. With greenhouse production, it is available throughout much of the year. Rhubarb grown in hothouses (heated greenhouses) is called hothouse rhubarb, and is typically made available at consumer markets in early spring, before outdoor cultivated rhubarb is available. Hothouse rhubarb is usually brighter red, more tender and sweeter-tasting than outdoor rhubarb.[3] In temperate climates, rhubarb is one of the first food plants harvested, usually in mid- to late spring (April/May in the Northern Hemisphere, October/November in the Southern Hemisphere), and the season for field-grown plants lasts until September. In the northwestern US states of Oregon and Washington, there are typically two harvests, from late April to May and from late June into July. Rhubarb is ready to consume as soon as harvested, and freshly cut stalks are firm and glossy.

In the United Kingdom, the first rhubarb of the year is harvested by candlelight in forcing sheds where all other light is excluded – a practice that produces a sweeter, more tender stalk.[4] These sheds are dotted around the noted "Rhubarb Triangle" of Wakefield, Leeds, and Morley.[5]

Rhubarb grows year-round in warm climates, but in temperate climates the above ground portion of the plant completely withers away at the onset of freezing temperature. The plant grows from the root at the return of warm weather. Rhubarb growth can be "forced" or encouraged to grow early by raising the local temperature, usually by placing an upturned bucket over the new shoots.

Because rhubarb is a seasonal plant, obtaining fresh rhubarb out of season is difficult in colder climates, such as in the UK, Ireland, Russia, etc. Rhubarb thrives in areas of direct sunlight and can successfully be planted in containers if they are large enough to accommodate a season's growth.

Rhubarb damaged by severe cold should not be eaten, as it may be high in oxalic acid, which migrates from the leaves and can cause illness.[6]

A bundle of organic, cultivated rhubarb

The colour of rhubarb stalks can vary from the commonly associated crimson red, through speckled light pink, to simply light green. Rhubarb stalks are poetically described as "crimson stalks". The colour results from the presence of anthocyanins, and varies according to both rhubarb variety and production technique. The colour is not related to its suitability for cooking:[7] The green-stalked rhubarb is more robust and has a higher yield, but the red-coloured stalks are much more popular with consumers.

Historical cultivation

Rhubarb has been used for medical purposes by the Chinese for thousands of years,[2] and appears in The Divine Farmer's Herb-Root Classic which is thought to have been compiled about 2,700 years ago.[8] Though Dioscurides' description of ρηον or ρά indicates that a medicinal root brought to Greece from beyond the Bosphorus may have been rhubarb, commerce in the drug did not become securely established until Islamic times. During Islamic times, it was imported along the Silk Road, reaching Europe in the 14th century through the ports of Aleppo and Smyrna, where it became known as "Turkish rhubarb". Later, when the usual route lay through Russia, "Russian rhubarb" became the familiar term.[9]

For centuries, the plant has grown wild along the banks of the River Volga, for which the ancient Scythian hydronym was Rhā.[10] The cost of transportation across Asia made rhubarb expensive in medieval Europe. It was several times the price of other valuable herbs and spices such as cinnamon, opium, and saffron. The merchant explorer Marco Polo therefore searched for the place where the plant was grown and harvested, discovering that it was cultivated in the mountains of Tangut province.[8] The value of rhubarb can be seen in Ruy Gonzáles de Clavijo's report of his embassy in 1403–05 to Timur in Samarkand: "The best of all merchandise coming to Samarkand was from China: especially silks, satins, musk, rubies, diamonds, pearls, and rhubarb..."[11]

The term "rhubarb" is a combination of the Ancient Greek rha and barbarum; rha refers both to the plant and to the River Volga.[12] Rhubarb first came to the United States in the 1820s, entering the country in Maine and Massachusetts and moving westwards with the European American settlers.[13]

Uses

Strawberry flavoured rhubarb, dried

Rhubarb is grown primarily for its fleshy stalks, technically known as petioles. The use of rhubarb stems as food is a relatively recent innovation. This usage was first recorded in 17th-century England after affordable sugar became available to common people, and reached a peak between the 20th century's two world wars.

Commonly, it is stewed with sugar or used in pies and desserts, but it can also be put into savory dishes or pickled. Rhubarb can be dehydrated and infused with fruit juice. In most cases, it is infused with strawberry juice to mimic the popular strawberry rhubarb pie.

Rhubarb root produces a rich brown dye similar to walnut husks. It is used in northern regions where walnut trees do not survive.

Cooking

A homemade rhubarb pie

For cooking, the stalks are often cut into small pieces and stewed (boiled in water) with added sugar. Little water is needed, as rhubarb stalks contain a great deal of water on their own. Spices such as cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger are sometimes added. The sliced stalks are boiled until soft. Stewed rhubarb, rhubarb sauce, like applesauce, is usually eaten cold.

Pectin, or sugar with pectin, can be added to the mixture to make jams.

A similar preparation thickened with cornstarch is used as filling for rhubarb pie, tarts, and crumbles. Sometimes stewed strawberries are mixed with the rhubarb in strawberry-rhubarb pie. This common use has led to the slang term for rhubarb, pie plant, by which name it was more commonly known in the United States in the late 19th century. In her novella The First Four Years, American author Laura Ingalls Wilder refers to rhubarb as "pie plant". It can also be used to make a fruit wine.

In former days, a common and affordable sweet for children in parts of the United Kingdom and Sweden was a tender stick of rhubarb, dipped in sugar. It is still eaten this way in western Finland and Norway, Iceland and some other parts of the world. In Chile, Chilean rhubarb, which is only very distantly related, is sold on the street with salt or dried chili pepper, not sugar.

Medicine

In traditional Chinese medicine, rhubarb roots have been used as a laxative for several millennia.[14] Rhubarb also appears in medieval Arabic and European prescriptions.[15][16] It was one of the first Chinese medicines to be imported to the West from China.[17]

Chemistry

The roots and stems are rich in anthraquinones, such as emodin and rhein.[2] These substances are cathartic and laxative, explaining the sporadic use of rhubarb as a dieting aid. The anthraquinone compounds have been separated from powdered rhubarb root for medicinal purposes.[14]

The rhizomes ('roots') contain stilbenoid compounds (including rhaponticin), which seem to lower blood glucose levels in diabetic mice.[18]

It also contains the flavanol glucosides (+)-catechin-5-O-glucoside and (−)-catechin-7-O-glucoside.[19]

Rhubarb contains carbon-based quinone molecules which are capable of carrying an electrical charge. In 2014 a Harvard-based team of scientists published results[20] describing the use of the quinone AQDS, almost identical to a form found in rhubarb, in flow-batteries.[21]

Toxicity

Rhubarb flower

Rhubarb leaves contain poisonous substances, including oxalic acid, which is a nephrotoxic and corrosive acid that is present in many plants. Humans have been poisoned after ingesting the leaves. Such poisoning was a particular problem in World War I, when the leaves were recommended as a food source in Britain.[22][23]

The LD50 (median lethal dose) for pure oxalic acid in rats is about 375 mg/kg body weight,[24] or about 25 grams for a 65 kg (~140 lb) human. (Other sources give a much higher oral LDLo (lowest published lethal dose) of 600 mg/kg.[25]) While the oxalic acid content of rhubarb leaves can vary, a typical value is about 0.5%,[26] so a rather unlikely 5 kg (for a 70 kg human) of the extremely sour leaves would have to be consumed to reach an LD50 of oxalic acid. Cooking the leaves with soda can make them more poisonous by producing soluble oxalates.[27] However, the leaves are believed to also contain an additional, unidentified toxin,[28] which might be an anthraquinone glycoside (also known as senna glycosides).[29]

In the petioles (stalks), the amount of oxalic acid is much lower, only about 2-2.5% of the total acidity, which is dominated by malic acid.[30]

Pests

The rhubarb curculio, Lixus concavus, is a weevil. Rhubarb is a host, damage being visible mainly on the leaves and stalks, with gummosis and oval or circular feeding and/or egg-laying sites.[31]

Hungry wildlife may dig up and eat rhubarb roots in the spring, as stored starches are turned to sugars for new foliage growth.

"Rhubarb rhubarb"

Main article: Walla

In British theatre and early radio drama, the words "rhubarb rhubarb" were repeated for the effect of unintelligible conversation in the background.[32][33][34][35][36][37] This usage lent its title to the 1969 film Rhubarb and its 1980 remake Rhubarb Rhubarb.

See also

References

  1. findlaw.com "NIX v. HEDDEN, 149 U.S. 304 (1893)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Pharmacognosy of Rhubarb
  3. Rombauer, Irma S. Joy of Cooking Indianapolis/New York:1975 Bobbs-Merrill Co., Inc. Page 142
  4. McGee, Harold. On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen. New York, NY: Scribner, 2004. p 367
  5. Wakefield Metropolitan District Council. "Rhubarb". Retrieved 2006-03-12.
  6. "Growing Rhubarb in the Home Garden". Ohio State University Extension Fact Sheet. Retrieved June 4, 2013.
  7. "Rhubarb Varieties". Rhubarbinfo.com. 2004-09-01. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  8. 8.0 8.1 John Uri Lloyd (1921). Origin and History of All the Pharmacopeial Vegetable Drugs, Chemicals and Origin and History of All the Pharmacopeial Vegetable Drugs, Chemicals and Preparations with Bibliography 1. ISBN 978-1-4086-8990-5.
  9. Eric Herbert Warmington, The Commerce Between the Roman Empire and India (1974). p. 207f http://books.google.ca/books?id=u9w8AAAAIAAJ. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. Warmington 1974.
  11. Quoted in Frances Wood, The Silk Road: two thousand years in the heart of Asia, 2002:13f.
  12. McGee, Harold. On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen. New York, NY: Scribner, 2004. p. 366
  13. Waters, Alice. Chez Panisse Fruit. New York, NY: Harper Collins, 2002. p 278
  14. 14.0 14.1 Barceloux, Donald G (7 March 2012). Medical Toxicology of Natural Substances: Foods, Fungi, Medicinal Herbs, Plants, and Venomous Animals. John Wiley & Sons. p. 235. ISBN 978-1-118-38276-9. Retrieved 5 August 2013.
  15. Charles Perry, trans. An Anonymous Andalusian Cookbook of the 13th Century
  16. Oxford English Dictionary s.n. rhubarb, n.
  17. Rhubarb James Ford Bell Library University of Minnesota (accessed January 12, 2015)
  18. "Rhaponticin from rhubarb rhizomes alleviates liver steatosis and improves blood glucose and lipid profiles in KK/Ay diabetic mice." 2009
  19. Flavanol glucosides from rhubarb and Rhaphiolepis umbellata. Gen-Ichiro Nonaka, Emiko Ezakia, Katsuya Hayashia and Itsuo Nishioka, Phytochemistry, Volume 22, Issue 7, 1983, Pages 1659–1661, doi:10.1016/0031-9422(83)80105-8
  20. "A metal-free organic-inorganic aqueous flow battery". Nature 505 (7482): 195–198. 9 January 2014. doi:10.1038/nature12909. PMID 24402280.
  21. Spross, Jeff. "How A New Rhubarb-Based Battery Could Massively Increase Renewable Energy Use". Thinkprogress. Retrieved 5 December 2014.
  22. Robb, H. F. (1919). "Death from rhubarb leaves due to oxalic acid poisoning". J. Am. Med. Assoc 73: 627–628.
  23. Cooper, M. R., Johnson, A. W. 1984. "Poisonous plants in Britain and their effects on animals and man." Her Majesty's Stationery Office, London, England.
  24. "Rhurbarb poisoning on rhurbabinfo.com".
  25. Safety Officer in Physical Chemistry (August 13, 2005). "Safety (MSDS) data for oxalic acid dihydrate". Oxford University. Retrieved December 30, 2009.
  26. GW Pucher, AJ Wakeman, HB Vickery. THE ORGANIC ACIDS OF RHUBARB (RHEUM HYBRIDUM). III. THE BEHAVIOR OF THE ORGANIC ACIDS DURING CULTURE OF EXCISED LEAVES Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1938
  27. Everist, Selwyn L., Poisonous Plants of Australia. Angus and Robertson, Melbourne, 1974, p. 583
  28. "Rhubarb leaves poisoning". Medline Plus Medical Encyclopedia.
  29. "Canadian Poisonous Plants Information System". Cbif.gc.ca. 2009-09-01. Retrieved 2010-03-05.
  30. McGee, Harold. On Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen. New York, NY: Scribner, 2004. p. 367
  31. Insect Diagnosis Laboratory. Accessed : 2010-07-21
  32. 1981: Tony Harrison, The Rhubarbarians I in collection Continuous: 50 sonnets from 'The School of Eloquence' . Rex Collings, London (1981)
  33. 1983: Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn, Victory Celebrations
  34. 1995: Sandra M. Gilbert, Susan Gubar, Masterpiece Theatre: An Academic Melodrama
  35. 1992, John Matthias, Reading Old Friends: Essays, Reviews, and Poems on Poetics, 1975-1990
  36. 1992, Brenda Murphy, Tennessee Williams and Elia Kazan: A Collaboration in the Theatre
  37. 2002, Oliver Taplin, Greek Tragedy in Action

Further reading

External links

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