The tips have the best flavor, so make sure they are firm and unwilted. Do a sniff test, too. Asparagus that’s past its prime gets smelly fast.
Asparagus comes in several sizes, ranging in diameter from thinner than a drinking straw to fatter than your thumb. If you’re shopping at a farmers’ market, you might be able to ask the seller to put together a bundle of stalks that are the same size. Otherwise, doing that in a grocery store could earn you some hard stares.
Grocery stores often bring in asparagus to coincide with big holiday meals, but that means you’ll pay higher prices than you normally would. Fresh asparagus grown in Mexico shows up soon after New Year’s, but if you’re buying a locally grown crop, you won’t see it in the market until springtime. If you’re in Florida, that means February; further north, it’s closer to April. Buying in season also means much cheaper prices.
Asparagus is a one-night-only type of vegetable — it doesn’t store well, and it usually doesn’t make for great leftovers. For the freshest flavor, try to buy and eat asparagus on the same day.
White asparagus is just green asparagus that hasn’t seen the light of day. To keep it from turning green, it’s grown in total darkness under mounds of dirt. Popular in Europe, white asparagus is tender and mild. Find out more about the underground cult of white asparagus.
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