Difference between revisions of "Blauwschokkers"
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| + | {{peabox | ||
| + | |Uses= soup | ||
| + | |Growth Habit= pole | ||
| + | |Maturity= | ||
| + | |Flower Color= pink & light pink | ||
| + | |Pod Color= purple | ||
| + | |Pod Shape= inflated | ||
| + | |Seed Color= green-brown | ||
| + | |Seed Pattern= solid | ||
| + | |Seed Shape= wrinkled | ||
| + | }} | ||
| + | |||
| + | __NOTOC__ | ||
| + | == Name and History == | ||
| + | The name is Dutch; "blauw" means "blue," and "schokker" is something from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schokland Schokland] in the Netherland (could also refer to [http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schokker_(schip) a type of ship] or to the dialect of Schokland, but those seem less likely). Also called Capucijners (after the Capuchin Monks), Purple-podded Peas, or Blue-podded Peas. Grown all over Europe since the Middle Ages. | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Description == | ||
| + | {{Description | ||
| + | |Growth= | ||
| + | |Flowers= | ||
| + | |Pods= Purple. | ||
| + | |Seeds= Freshly-dried seeds are a light brownish green. In storage they lose all trace of green and turn dark brown. | ||
| + | }} | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Uses == | ||
| + | Primarily grown for the dry seed, though the plants are also quite ornamental, with large bicolor purple flowers and purple pea pods. The very young pods can supposedly be eaten as snow peas though they tend to be fibrous. The fresh seeds are quite starchy even when very young and are generally not liked. | ||
| + | |||
| + | == Gallery == | ||
| + | <gallery mode=packed widths="300px" heights="300px"> | ||
| + | </gallery> | ||
| + | |||
[[Category:Pea Varieties]] | [[Category:Pea Varieties]] | ||
[[Category:Purple-podded Peas]] | [[Category:Purple-podded Peas]] | ||
[[Category:Soup Peas]] | [[Category:Soup Peas]] | ||
| + | [[Category:Netherlands]] | ||
Latest revision as of 05:06, 20 February 2015
| Blauwschokkers | |
|---|---|
| Uses | soup |
| Growth Habit | pole |
| Maturity | |
| Flower Color | pink & light pink |
| Pod Color | purple |
| Seed Color | green-brown |
| Seed Pattern | solid |
Name and History
The name is Dutch; "blauw" means "blue," and "schokker" is something from Schokland in the Netherland (could also refer to a type of ship or to the dialect of Schokland, but those seem less likely). Also called Capucijners (after the Capuchin Monks), Purple-podded Peas, or Blue-podded Peas. Grown all over Europe since the Middle Ages.
Description
Growth:
Flowers:
Pods:
Purple.
Seeds:
Freshly-dried seeds are a light brownish green. In storage they lose all trace of green and turn dark brown.
Uses
Primarily grown for the dry seed, though the plants are also quite ornamental, with large bicolor purple flowers and purple pea pods. The very young pods can supposedly be eaten as snow peas though they tend to be fibrous. The fresh seeds are quite starchy even when very young and are generally not liked.