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All About Greens
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UK Cooking Technique · Vegan

Blanching Greens

Blanching - briefly submerging vegetables in boiling salted water then immediately plunging into iced water - is the technique behind vibrantly green, perfectly textured vegetables. It sets the colour by deactivating enzymes that turn greens grey, and parcooks the vegetable so it needs only seconds of final heat before serving.

Cooking in the US? View this guide for US kitchens.

Why It Matters

Blanching separates professional-looking vegan cooking from home cooking. A properly blanched green is vivid, tender-crisp and seasoned through - not grey and limp.

Step-by-Step: Blanching Greens

  1. Bring a large pot of water to a rolling boil and add a generous tablespoon of fine salt - it should taste noticeably salty.
  2. Prepare a large bowl of iced water (or very cold tap water if ice isn't available) nearby.
  3. Add the vegetables - broccoli, green beans, spinach, kale, asparagus - and cook for 1 - 4 minutes depending on thickness.
  4. Taste as you go: the vegetable should be bright green and just tender with a slight crunch remaining.
  5. Immediately lift out with a slotted spoon and plunge into the iced water. Leave for at least 1 minute until completely cold.
  6. Drain, pat dry, and use in salads, stir-fries or serve with a dressing - or store refrigerated for up to 2 days.

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Watch this technique on video

In our Cook Like A Pro course, chefs Rupert Worden and Lisa Hinze teaches vegan cooking techniques like blanching greens with step-by-step video demonstrations tailored for British home cooks.

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