Rhubarb’s harvest window lasts just eight weeks, from April through early June, making it one of the most time-sensitive ingredients on the spring produce calendar. Home cooks are paying closer attention to what is available now rather than what is available year-round, and rhubarb fits that moment precisely.
Preserving Rhubarb
Cooks who process rhubarb at its peak trade a few hours of work in May or early June for months of access afterward. Small-batch jams, compotes and pickled preparations all hold well, and each serves a different purpose in the kitchen.
Strawberry-rhubarb jam is the obvious entry point, with strawberries’ sweetness rounding out rhubarb’s edge to produce a preserve that stays bright and tart rather than turning flat. Pickled rhubarb lands in different territory: firm, acidic and intensely colored, it holds its own alongside cheese, charcuterie and grains outside the dessert context entirely.
Rhubarb beyond the pie dish used as a finishing element rather than a structural one, rhubarb works in a wider range of preparations than most cooks give it credit for. Folded into whipped cream or stirred through a chilled custard, it cuts through richness and adds color without changing the dish’s character.
Original reporting: KTBS 3 (Shreveport) — read the source article.