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6
First-CourseEasy
Published 2002
Americans don’t eat much celeriac (also called celery root), no doubt in part because of its intimidating appearance. Celeriac shows up in markets, usually without its greens, as a knobby and hairy-looking vaguely spherical root that is rather large, between a rutabaga and a turnip in size. Most of us don’t know how to peel such a thing, much less how to prepare and eat it. As you may have guessed, celeriac is closely related to our everyday celery, which the French call céleri-branche. But
