Ranunculus arvensis is a ANNUAL growing to 0.5 m (1ft 8in). It is not frost tender. It is in flower from June to July, and the seeds ripen from July to August. The species is hermaphrodite (has both male and female organs) and is pollinated by Flies. Suitable for: light (sandy), medium (loamy) and heavy (clay) soils. Suitable pH: acid, neutral and basic (alkaline) soils and can grow in very. Garlic-Chive Butter. Chives are one of the easiest herbs to grow in a home garden.
One of the only vegetables my family all agrees on is corn! My kids love corn on the cob, corn casserole, slow cooker creamed corn and just plain old canned corn or frozen corn. This honey butter skillet corn is so creamy, sweet, delicious, and something everyone loves. It cooks in one skillet pan and it uses frozen corn! Simple to make with only 4 ingredients + salt & pepper. Ingredients. 2.
General Information | |
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Symbol: | RAAR3 |
Group: | Dicot |
Family: | Ranunculaceae |
Duration: | Annual Biennial |
Growth Habit: | Forb/herb |
Native Status: | L48 I |
Data Source and Documentation |
Native | Introduced | Both | Absent/Unreported |
Native, No County Data | Introduced, No County Data | Both, No County Data |
Native Status: | |||||||||
L48 | AK | HI | PR | VI | NAV | CAN | GL | SPM | NA |
Steve Hurst. Provided by ARS Systematic Botany and Mycology Laboratory. India. Usage Requirements.
Britton, N.L., and A. Brown. 1913. An illustrated flora of the northern United States, Canada and the British Possessions. 3 vols. Charles Scribner's Sons, New York. Vol. 2: 115. Provided by Kentucky Native Plant Society. Scanned by Omnitek Inc. Usage Requirements.
slideshowSymbol | Scientific Name |
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RAART2 | Ranunculus arvensis L. var. tuberculatus (DC.) Koch |
Rank | Scientific Name and Common Name |
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Kingdom | Plantae – Plants |
Subkingdom | Tracheobionta – Vascular plants |
Superdivision | Spermatophyta – Seed plants |
Division | Magnoliophyta – Flowering plants |
Class | Magnoliopsida – Dicotyledons |
Subclass | Magnoliidae |
Order | Ranunculales |
Family | Ranunculaceae – Buttercup family |
Genus | Ranunculus L. – buttercup |
Species | Ranunculus arvensis L. – corn buttercup |
U.S. Weed Information | |
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corn buttercup This plant can be weedy or invasive according to the authoritative sources noted below.This plant may be known by one or more common names in different places, and some are listed above. Click on an acronym to view each weed list, or click here for a composite list of Weeds of the U.S. | |
SWSS | Southern Weed Science Society. 1998. Weeds of the United States and Canada. CD-ROM. Southern Weed Science Society. Champaign, Illinois. |
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More Accounts and Images | |
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ARS Germplasm Resources Information Network (RAAR3) | |
CalPhotos (RAAR3) | |
Flora of North America (RAAR3) | |
Integrated Taxonomic Information System (RAAR3) | |
Integrated Taxonomic Information System (RAART2) | |
Jepson Interchange (University of California - Berkeley) (RAAR3) | |
University of Tennessee Herbarium (Distribution) (RAAR3) |
Food
Source | Large Mammals | Small Mammals | Water Birds | Terrestrial Birds |
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Cover
Source | Large Mammals | Small Mammals | Water Birds | Terrestrial Birds |
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Description of Values
Value Class | Food | Cover |
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Butter Sauce For Corn
© Provided by Food52Every week in Genius Recipes—often with your help!—Food52 Creative Director and lifelong Genius-hunter Kristen Miglore is unearthing recipes that will change the way you cook.
This little recipe lived quite a life, until it vanished.
After swirling it into the $275-a-plate white truffle risotto while working the vegetable station at Per Se restaurant in New York City (and finishing her shift spooning it out of a deli container at 2 a.m.), Whitney Wright (1) brought it with her to Gilt Taste, the award-winning online food media arm of the flash sales site Gilt Groupe, where she pitched it as 'Amazing One-Ingredient Corn 'Butter' in 2012.
As Whitney told me, it was nearly impossible to come up with ideas that then Editorial Adviser Ruth Reichl hadn’t heard of, yet this one impressed her. 'I don’t know anybody in the world who knows more about food than she does,' Whitney said. 'And she said, 'This is so cool. I've never seen anything like this—let's run it.' Out into the hungry world it went.
What the world learned is that, when you wrest the milky liquid from fresh corn (2) (by de-kerneling, blending like mad, and straining away the pulp), then heat it on the stovetop, it quickly thickens into smooth, sweet, spreadable butter. The texture and spirit is a bit like apple and pumpkin butters, but without the need for added sweeteners or spices—and it's ready in four minutes instead of 45. But how?
© Provided by Food52“Corn is made up of a lot of sugar, particularly the corn that we eat,' Whitney said. 'And when they harvest the corn, that sugar starts turning into starch, almost immediately.” So the ears that were just harvested hours ago? Eat those right off the cob, typewriter style. From that day forth, they'll be great candidates for butter-ing.
Sadly, since Gilt Taste folded in 2013, the only place you could find the recipe was in our Genius Recipes cookbook, where I’d nestled it after Food52 community member jbban tipped me off. (3) Even Whitney couldn’t access her original version anymore.
Lucky for us, she had generously sent me the first draft of the article when I’d asked for it for the cookbook, so now we can not only share the magic of corn butter—but also Whitney’s list of brilliant ways to use it.
So here, resurrected from the churning maw of the internet, are those thought starters.'There are a zillion ways to eat or cook with this stuff,' Whitney wrote on Gilt Taste in 2012. Her genius suggestions:
- Slather onto cornbread or a muffin instead of butter
- Use it on sandwiches instead of mayonnaise
- Fold it into sautéed spinach with onions, and finish with just a touch of cream for killer creamed spinach
- Dribble it onto a hot dog (it’ll remind you of a corn dog)
- Stir it into risotto and finish with Parmesan
- Blend it with vanilla ice cream for a crazy delicious milkshake
- Top tacos or fajitas with it
- Mix it with shredded cheese, a little sour cream, and a jar of drained jalapeños, bake and serve as a LIFE ALTERING dip for tortilla chips
Now your turn. If we can stop ourselves from slathering it on every biscuit and English muffin we see, what else should we do with our corn butter?
© Provided by Food52
Corn Buttercup
Sweet Corn Butter From Whitney Wright
By Genius Recipes
Vegan Corn Butter
- 8 ears fresh sweet corn, shucked
- Butter and salt, to taste (optional)
(1) After working in food media, restaurants, and an investment fund, Wright is now the co-founder of Athena Collective, a gender equity nonprofit in Birmingham, Ala., and founder of the empowerment theory–driven Elia Fulmen Jewelry Co.
(2) After draining the corn milk to make butter, you’ll leave behind the dry pulp of the kernels. At Per Se, Whitney said it was repurposed to clarify (and add flavor to) stocks, and I think it would be good stirred into rustic breads or polenta. Any other ideas?
Sweet Corn Butter Recipe
(3) jbban had more ideas for corn butter that are too good not to share: “This morning, I mixed it with some softened cream cheese to dollop on zucchini bread pancakes. I can't stop thinking about turning it into caramel, possibly as the base for an ice cream, or just to drizzle on ice cream (peach flavored, perhaps?).”
Got a genius recipe to share—from a classic cookbook, an online source, or anywhere, really? Perhaps something perfect for beginners? Please send it my way (and tell me what's so smart about it) at genius@food52.com—thank you to jbban for this one!