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Food

Aspire to samphire

We dip our toe in the water and discover the latest trendy vegetable from the sea.

September 2, 2011 09:59
Samphire thrives by the sea

By

Anthea Gerrie,

Anthea Gerrie

2 min read

Once it was a treat fishmongers threw in free with the Dover sole, before it vanished from the slabs and re-emerged barely a decade ago as a pick-your-own crop for foodies scouring shorelines and riverbanks. Then, professional foragers started feeding it into restaurants and suddenly samphire became a fixture on the trendiest menus.

Now this delicious British summer vegetable has been introduced to the mainstream - you will find it in many branches of M&S and every Waitrose with a fish counter. It may look odd - green and kind of twiggy - but it has a high vitamin C content, a slight crunch and is a perfect partner for fish and lamb.

Samphire, which was on the menu at Charles and Diana's wedding and even given a name-check by Shakespeare, is a native marsh grass rather than the seaweed it resembles. In the wild - there are beds in East Anglia, Kent, Merseyside and Cornwall - it has all too short a season, appearing in June and gone by September.

However, Waitrose has found a way to keep samphire on the shelves into late autumn by growing their supply under glass in the Midlands: "We simply could not keep up with demand buying from wild sources last year," explains Rhonwen Cunningham, the buyer charged with getting at least 7,000 packs a week to Waitrose's more adventurous customers.

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