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Receta Potato Salad with Garlic Scapes, Snap Peas and Scallions
by Monte Mathews

Garlic Scapes make

their appearance once

a year. There

are cooks who wait all year to work with Garlic Scapes, the flower bud of the

garlic plant. The bud is removed about

this time every year to encourage the underground bulb to thicken up. They taste like garlic and can be used in any

recipe calling for the ‘stinking rose’.

That is what garlic has been called since Greek and Roman times. The reason for the ‘stinking’ part is all too

obvious. But why the rose? The plant is actually an allium which is part

of the Liliaceae or lily family. So where does the name come from? One possibility is that if you look at garlic

from underneath, the bulb does have a slight resemblance to a white rose with the

large ends of the cloves forming its petals.

It seems to me that that’s a bit of stretch, but it doesn’t take away

garlic’s unique contribution to cooking.

And this potato salad is a tribute to the relatively mild garlic flavor

of the scapes and how they enhance the sweetness of the other key ingredients:

potatoes and snow peas.

I found the recipe in Fine Cooking,

developed by one of their writers, Jennifer Armentrout who is now the Editor of

exactly as directed, switching in red bliss potatoes for the recommended Yukon

Golds. However I would now make a change to

the original having to do with the recommended way of dealing with the

potatoes. In the original, the

suggestion is to cook them and then peel them and cut them into smaller

‘bite-sized’ pieces. This is a dreadful

job. It would be far easier to peel and cut the

peeled potatoes into large dice—3/4 to 1 inch dice prior to cooking them. Not only would this cut down on the cooking time of the potatoes, it also has the effect of being able to

large bowl, mix the vinegar with 2 tsp. salt and stir to dissolve.

4. When the potatoes are just cool enough to handle, toss them

in the vinegar-salt mixture, and then stir in about half of the dressing. Add

the scapes, peas, scallions, herbs, the remaining dressing, and salt and pepper

to taste and mix well. Let cool to room temperature before serving.