Celery
Celery (Apium graveolens) is a marshland plant in the family Apiaceae that has been cultivated as a vegetable since antiquity. Celery has a long fibrous stalk tapering into leaves. Depending on location and cultivar, either its stalks, leaves or hypocotyl are eaten and used in cooking. Celery seed is also used as a spice and its extracts have been used in herbal medicine.
Celery | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Plantae |
Clade: | Tracheophytes |
Clade: | Angiosperms |
Clade: | Eudicots |
Clade: | Asterids |
Order: | Apiales |
Family: | Apiaceae |
Genus: | Apium |
Species: | A. graveolens |
Binomial name | |
Apium graveolens L. | |
Synonyms[2] | |
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Description
Celery leaves are pinnate to bipinnate with rhombic leaflets 3–6 centimetres (1–2 1⁄2 inches) long and 2–4 cm (1–1 1⁄2 in) broad. The flowers are creamy-white, 2–3 mm (3⁄32–1⁄8 in) in diameter, and are produced in dense compound umbels. The seeds are broad ovoid to globose, 1.5–2 mm (1⁄16–5⁄64 in) long and wide. Modern cultivars have been selected for solid petioles, leaf stalks.[3] A celery stalk readily separates into "strings" which are bundles of angular collenchyma cells exterior to the vascular bundles.[4]
Wild celery, Apium graveolens var. graveolens, grows to 1 m (3 ft 3 in) tall. Celery is a biennial plant that occurs around the globe. It produces flowers and seeds only during its second year. The first cultivation is thought to have happened in the Mediterranean region, where the natural habitats were salty and wet, or marshy soils near the coast where celery grew in agropyro-rumicion-plant communities.[5]
North of the Alps, wild celery is found only in the foothill zone on soils with some salt content. It prefers moist or wet, nutrient rich, muddy soils. It cannot be found in Austria and is increasingly rare in Germany.[6]
Cultivar | Image | Name |
---|---|---|
Celery | Apium graveolens var. graveolens | |
Celeriac | Apium graveolens var. rapaceum | |
Leaf celery | Apium graveolens var. secalinum |
Etymology
First attested in English in 1664, the word "celery" derives from the French céleri, in turn from Italian seleri, the plural of selero, which comes from Late Latin selinon,[7] the latinisation of the Ancient Greek: σέλινον, romanized: selinon, "celery".[8][9] The earliest attested form of the word is the Mycenaean Greek se-ri-no, written in Linear B syllabic script.[10]
Cultivation
The plants are raised from seed, sown either in a hot bed or in the open garden according to the season of the year, and, after one or two thinnings and transplantings, they are, on attaining a height of 15–20 cm (6–8 in), planted out in deep trenches for convenience of blanching, which is effected by earthing up to exclude light from the stems.
Celery was first grown as a winter and early spring vegetable.[12] It was considered a cleansing tonic to counter the deficiencies of a winter diet based on salted meats without fresh vegetables.[12] By the 19th century, the season for celery in England had been extended, to last from the beginning of September to late in April.[13]
North America
In North America, commercial production of celery is dominated by the cultivar called 'Pascal' celery.[3] Gardeners can grow a range of cultivars, many of which differ from the wild species, mainly in having stouter leaf stems. They are ranged under two classes, white and red. The stalks grow in tight, straight, parallel bunches, and are typically marketed fresh that way. They are sold without roots and only a small amount of green leaf remaining.
The stalks can be eaten raw, or as an ingredient in salads, or as a flavoring in soups, stews, and pot roasts.
Europe
In Europe, another popular variety is celeriac (also known as celery root), Apium graveolens var. rapaceum, grown because its hypocotyl forms a large bulb, white on the inside. The bulb can be kept for months in winter and mostly serves as a main ingredient in soup. It can also be shredded and used in salads. The leaves are used as seasoning; the small, fibrous stalks find only marginal use.[14][15][16]
Asia
Leaf celery (Chinese celery, Apium graveolens var. secalinum) is a cultivar from East Asia that grows in marshlands. Leaf celery has characteristically thin skin stalks and a stronger taste and smell compared to other cultivars. It is used as a flavoring in soups and sometimes pickled as a side dish.[17]
Wild
The wild form of celery is known as "smallage". It has a furrowed stalk with wedge-shaped leaves, the whole plant having a coarse, earthy taste, and a distinctive smell. The stalks are not usually eaten (except in soups or stews in French cuisine), but the leaves may be used in salads, and its seeds are those sold as a spice.[18] With cultivation and blanching, the stalks lose their acidic qualities and assume the mild, sweetish, aromatic taste particular to celery as a salad plant.
Because wild celery is rarely eaten, yet susceptible to the same diseases as more well-used cultivars, it is often removed from fields to help prevent transmission of viruses like celery mosaic virus.[19]
Harvesting and storage
Harvesting occurs when the average size of celery in a field is marketable; due to extremely uniform crop growth, fields are harvested only once. The petioles and leaves are removed and harvested; celery is packed by size and quality (determined by color, shape, straightness and thickness of petiole, stalk and midrib length and absence of disease, cracks, splits, insect damage and rot). During commercial harvesting, celery is packaged into cartons which contain between 36 and 48 stalks and weigh up to 27 kg (60 lb).[20] Under optimal conditions, celery can be stored for up to seven weeks from 0–2 °C (32–36 °F). Inner stalks may continue growing if kept at temperatures above 0 °C (32 °F). Shelf life can be extended by packaging celery in anti-fogging, micro-perforated shrink wrap.[21] Freshly cut petioles of celery are prone to decay, which can be prevented or reduced through the use of sharp blades during processing, gentle handling, and proper sanitation.[22]
Celery stalk may be preserved through pickling by first removing the leaves, then boiling the stalks in water before finally adding vinegar, salt, and vegetable oil.
Sulfites
In the past, restaurants used to store celery in a container of water with powdered vegetable preservative, but it was found that the sulfites in the preservative caused allergic reactions in some people.[23] In 1986, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration banned the use of sulfites on fruits and vegetables intended to be eaten raw.[24]
Uses
Celery is eaten around the world as a vegetable. In North America the crisp petiole (leaf stalk) is used. In Europe the hypocotyl is used as a root vegetable. The leaves are strongly flavored and are used less often, either as a flavoring in soups and stews or as a dried herb. Celery, onions, and bell peppers are the "holy trinity" of Louisiana Creole and Cajun cuisine. Celery, onions, and carrots make up the French mirepoix, often used as a base for sauces and soups. Celery is a staple in many soups, such as chicken noodle soup.
Phthalides occur naturally in celery.[25]
Leaves
Celery leaves are frequently used in cooking to add a mild spicy flavor to foods, similar to, but milder than black pepper. Celery leaves are suitable dried as a sprinkled on seasoning for use with baked, fried or roasted fish, meats and as part of a blend of fresh seasonings suitable for use in soups and stews. They may also be eaten raw, mixed into a salad or as a garnish.
Seeds
In temperate countries, celery is also grown for its seeds. Actually very small fruit, these "seeds" yield a valuable essential oil that is used in the perfume industry. The oil contains the chemical compound apiole. Celery seeds can be used as flavoring or spice, either as whole seeds or ground.
Celery salt
The seeds can be ground and mixed with salt, to produce celery salt. Celery salt can be made from an extract of the roots or using dried leaves. Celery salt is used as a seasoning, in cocktails (notably to enhance the flavor of Bloody Mary cocktails), on the Chicago-style hot dog, and in Old Bay Seasoning. Similarly, combinations of celery powder and salt are used to flavor & preserve cured pork[26] and other processed meats as an all natural alternative to industrial curing salt.[27] The naturally occurring nitrites in celery work synergistically with the added salt to cure food.
Herbalism
Celery seeds have been used widely in Eastern herbal traditions such as Ayurveda.[28] Aulus Cornelius Celsus wrote that celery seeds could relieve pain in around AD 30.[29]
Celery juice trend
In 2019, a trend in drinking celery juice was reported in the United States, based on "detoxification" claims from blogger Anthony William, author of "Medical Medium", who says he receives advanced health information from what he calls "Spirit of Compassion" which he says he channels. The health claims have no scientific basis, but the trend caused a sizable spike in celery prices.[30][31]
Nutrition
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz) | |
---|---|
Energy | 67 kJ (16 kcal) |
2.97 g (including fiber) | |
Starch | 0.00 g |
Sugars | 1.34 g 0.00 g |
Dietary fiber | 1.6 g |
0.17 g | |
Saturated | 0.042 g |
Trans | 0.000 g |
Monounsaturated | 0.032 g |
Polyunsaturated | 0.079 g |
0.69 g | |
Vitamins | Quantity %DV† |
Vitamin A equiv. | 3% 22 μg |
Thiamine (B1) | 2% 0.021 mg |
Riboflavin (B2) | 5% 0.057 mg |
Niacin (B3) | 2% 0.320 mg |
Pantothenic acid (B5) | 5% 0.246 mg |
Vitamin B6 | 6% 0.074 mg |
Folate (B9) | 9% 36 μg |
Vitamin B12 | 0% 0.00 μg |
Choline | 1% 6.1 mg |
Vitamin C | 4% 3.1 mg |
Vitamin D | 0% 0 IU |
Vitamin E | 2% 0.27 mg |
Vitamin K | 28% 29.3 μg |
Minerals | Quantity %DV† |
Calcium | 4% 40 mg |
Copper | 2% 0.035 mg |
Iron | 2% 0.20 mg |
Magnesium | 3% 11 mg |
Phosphorus | 3% 24 mg |
Potassium | 6% 260 mg |
Sodium | 5% 80 mg |
Zinc | 1% 0.13 mg |
Other constituents | Quantity |
Water | 95.43 g |
Alcohol (ethanol) | 0.0 g |
Caffeine | 0 mg |
Cholesterol | 0 mg |
| |
†Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults. Source: USDA FoodData Central |
A typical 100-g serving of celery contains 16 kcal (67 kJ) of energy and consists of about 95% water. Celery is a good source of Vitamin K, providing about 28% of the Daily Value (DV) per 100-g serving (see right table), and consists of modest amounts of many other vitamins and minerals.
Celery is used in weight loss diets, where it provides low-calorie dietary fiber bulk. Celery is often incorrectly thought to be a "negative-calorie food", the digestion of which burns more calories than the body can obtain. In fact, eating celery provides positive net calories, with digestion consuming only a small proportion of the calories taken in.[32]
Allergies
Celery is among a small group of foods (headed by peanuts) that appear to provoke the most severe allergic reactions; for people with celery allergy, exposure can cause potentially fatal anaphylactic shock.[33] The allergen does not appear to be destroyed at cooking temperatures.
Celery root—commonly eaten as celeriac, or put into drinks—is known to contain more allergen than the stalk. Seeds contain the highest levels of allergen content. Exercise-induced anaphylaxis may be exacerbated.
An allergic reaction also may be triggered by eating foods that have been processed with machines that have previously processed celery, making avoiding such foods difficult.
In the European Union, foods that contain or may contain celery, even in trace amounts, must be clearly marked as such.[34]
Chemistry
Polyynes can be found in Apiaceae vegetables like celery, and their extracts show cytotoxic activities.[35][36] Celery contains phenolic acid, which is an antioxidant.[37]
Apiin and apigenin can be extracted from celery and parsley. Lunularin is a dihydrostilbenoid found in common celery.
The main chemicals responsible for the aroma and taste of celery are butylphthalide and sedanolide.[38]
History
Daniel Zohary and Maria Hopf[39] note that celery leaves and inflorescences were part of the garlands found in the tomb of pharaoh Tutankhamun (died 1323 BC), and celery mericarps dated to the seventh century BC were recovered in the Heraion of Samos. However, they note "since A. graveolens grows wild in these areas, it is hard to decide whether these remains represent wild or cultivated forms." Only by classical times is it certain that celery was cultivated.
M. Fragiska mentions an archeological find of celery dating to the 9th century BC, at Kastanas; however, the literary evidence for ancient Greece is far more abundant. In Homer's Iliad, the horses of the Myrmidons graze on wild celery that grows in the marshes of Troy, and in Odyssey, there is mention of the meadows of violet and wild celery surrounding the cave of Calypso.[40]
In the Capitulary of Charlemagne, compiled ca. 800, apium appears, as does olisatum, or alexanders, among medicinal herbs and vegetables the Frankish emperor desired to see grown.[41] At some later point in medieval Europe celery displaced alexanders.
The name "celery" retraces the plant's route of successive adoption in European cooking, as the English "celery" (1664) is derived from the French céleri coming from the Lombard term, seleri, from the Latin selinon, borrowed from Greek.[42]
Celery's late arrival in the English kitchen is an end-product of the long tradition of seed selection needed to reduce the sap's bitterness and increase its sugars. By 1699, John Evelyn could recommend it in his Acetaria. A Discourse of Sallets: "Sellery, apium Italicum, (and of the Petroseline Family) was formerly a stranger with us (nor very long since in Italy) is an hot and more generous sort of Macedonian Persley or Smallage... and for its high and grateful Taste is ever plac'd in the middle of the Grand Sallet, at our Great Men's tables, and Praetors feasts, as the Grace of the whole Board".[43]
Celery makes a minor appearance in colonial American gardens; its culinary limitations are reflected in the observation by the author of A Treatise on Gardening, by a Citizen of Virginia that it is "one of the species of parsley."[44] Its first extended treatment in print was in Bernard M'Mahon's American Gardener's Calendar (1806).[45]
After the mid-19th century, continued selections for refined crisp texture and taste brought celery to American tables, where it was served in celery vases to be salted and eaten raw. Celery was so popular in the United States in the 1800s and early 1900s that the New York Public Library's historical menu archive shows that it was the third most popular dish in New York City menus during that time, behind only coffee and tea. In those days celery cost more than caviar, as it was difficult to cultivate. There were also many varieties of celery back then that are no longer around because they are difficult to grow and do not ship well.[46]
Cultural depictions
A chthonian symbol among the ancient Greeks, celery was said to have sprouted from the blood of Kadmilos, father of the Cabeiri, chthonian divinities celebrated in Samothrace, Lemnos, and Thebes . The spicy odor and dark leaf color encouraged this association with the cult of death. In classical Greece, celery leaves were used as garlands for the dead, and the wreaths of the winners at the Isthmian Games were first made of celery before being replaced by crowns made of pine. According to Pliny the Elder[47] in Achaea, the garland worn by the winners of the sacred Nemean Games was also made of celery.[40] The Ancient Greek colony of Selinous (Ancient Greek: Σελινοῦς, Selinous), on Sicily, was named after wild parsley that grew abundantly there; Selinountian coins depicted a parsley leaf as the symbol of the city.
See also
- Apium virus Y
- Celery mosaic virus
- Celery powder
- Liriomyza trifolii – celery leaf miner
- Vallisneria americana – wild celery
- List of vegetables
References
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- Fischer, Manfred A.; Günter, Gottschlich (2008). Exkursionsflora für Österreich, Liechtenstein und Südtirol : Bestimmungsbuch für alle in der Republik Österreich, im Fürstentum Liechtenstein und in der Autonomen Provinz Bozen / Südtirol (Italien) wildwachsenden sowie die wichtigsten kultivierten Gefässpflanzen (Farnpflanzen und Samenpflanzen) mit Angaben über ihre Ökologie und Verbreitung (in German). Oberösterreichisches Landesmuseum. p. 849. ISBN 9783854741879. OCLC 886822563.
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- Newman, Jacqueline (Fall 2006). "Chinese Celery". Vegetables and Vegetarian Foods. 13 (3): 15–34. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
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- Wellman, F (February 1937). "Control of Southern Celery Mosaic in Florida by Removing Weeds That Serve as Sources of Mosaic Infection". United States Department of Agriculture. 54 (8): 1–16. Retrieved 21 April 2017.
- Takele, Etaferahu. "Celery Production: Sample Costs and Profitability Analysis" (PDF). UC Davis. University of California Agriculture and Natural Resources. Retrieved 16 April 2017.
- Rizzo, V (January 2009). "Effects of packaging on shelf life of fresh celery". Journal of Food Engineering. 90 (1): 124–128. doi:10.1016/j.jfoodeng.2008.06.011.
- Cantwell, M; Suslow, T. (2002-06-10). "Celery: Recommendations for Maintaining Postharvest Quality". Post-harvest technology research and information center. Archived from the original on 2008-04-23. Retrieved 2008-03-04.
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- "Hot Dogs, Bacon, Celery Powder and Cancer Risk - American Institute for Cancer Research %". American Institute for Cancer Research. 26 July 2017. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
- "Duped In The Deli Aisle? 'No Nitrates Added' Labels Are Often Misleading". NPR.org. Retrieved 15 September 2020.
- "Complementary and Alternative Medicine Guide > Herb > Celery seed". University of Maryland Medical Center. 2015-06-22. Retrieved 2018-02-15.
- "LacusCurtius • Celsus — De Medicina". penelope.uchicago.edu.
- Meltzer, Marisa (June 27, 2019). "Why Is Everyone Drinking Celery Juice as if It Will Save Them From Dying?" – via NYTimes.com.
- Uguen-Csenge, Eva (29 March 2019). "Celery prices soar as juice shops struggle to meet demand from latest health fad". CBC News. Retrieved 9 January 2020.
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- Yang, Yao (2010). "Phenolic Composition and Antioxidant Activities of 11 Celery Cultivars". Journal of Food Science. 75 (1): C9–C13. doi:10.1111/j.1750-3841.2009.01392.x. PMID 20492156.
- Wilson, Charles Welthy III (1970). "Relative recovery and identification of carbonyl compounds from celery essential oil". Journal of Food Science. 35 (6): 766–768. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2621.1970.tb01989.x.
- D. Zohary and M. Hopf, Domestication of Plants in the Old World, (3rd ed. 2000) p.202.
- Megaloudi, Fragiska (2005). "Wild and Cultivated Vegetables, Herbs and Spices in Greek Antiquity (900 B.C. to 400 B.C.)". Environmental Archaeology. 10 (1): 73–82. doi:10.1179/146141005790083858.
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Further reading
- El-Shinnawy, Nashwa (1 February 2013). "The therapeutic applications of celery oil seed extract on the plasticizer di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate toxicity". Toxicology and Industrial Health. 31 (4): 355–366. doi:10.1177/0748233713475515. PMID 23377116. S2CID 46193115.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to |
Wikispecies has information related to Apium graveolens. |
- Encyclopædia Britannica. 5 (11th ed.). 1911. .
- Apium graveolens in Plant Resources of Tropical Africa (PROTA)
- Quality standards (in PDF), from the USDA website