I had a request from a reader for recipes for rhubarb and I'm happy to oblige.
When I was growing up, my grandma Dillon had a lot of rhubarb in the garden, on the edge by the fence. The plants got so big they would come to the top of the fence.
The leaves (which you do not eat; they are toxic) got so huge my cousins and I would make hats out of them when we were playing.
Grandma called it "pie plant" and she cooked a lot of it in cobblers, pies and something she called rhubarb pudding.
She made rhubarb jam that was absolutely delicious.
If you currently subscribe or have subscribed in the past to the Lebanon Enterprise, then simply find your account number on your mailing label and enter it below.
Click the question mark below to see where your account ID appears on your mailing label.
If you are new to the award winning Lebanon Enterprise and wish to get a subscription or simply gain access to our online content then please enter your ZIP code below and continue to setup your account.
| ZIP Code: | |