Watercress - Glossary - How to cook - BBC Good Food
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The Good Food Glossary

Jar of watercress

Watercress

Pronounce it: wort-er-cress

With deep green leaves, and crisp, paler stems, watercress is related to mustard and is one of the strongest-tasting salad leaves available. It has a pungent, slightly bitter, peppery flavour and is highly nutritious, containing significant amounts of iron, calcium, vitamins A, C and E. It's sold in either bunches or bags, and is good combined in a salad with milder leaves, or made into soup.

Availibility

Watercress is available all year round but is at its best from April until September.

Choose the best

Go for crisp, dark green leaves, with no sign of yellowing or wilting.

Prepare it

Wash and shake dry just before you're about to use it. Both the leaves and stems are edible - just trim off any tough roots.

Store it

Watercress is highly perishable, so store it in a perforated bag in the fridge and eat it within a couple of days. Alternatively, treat it like a bunch of flowers and put in a glass of water in the fridge, covering the leaves with a plastic bag - it can last a little longer that way.

Cook it

In a salad with rocket and orange segments; combine with potatoes in a soup; use in tarts and omelettes; use to make white bread sandwiches or as a garnish for cooked foods such as game.

Can't find it

Try rocket or winter cress

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