Brussels Sprouts Panama City FL

Before you utter an “Ewww!” or an “Ick,” we encourage you to forget traumatic memories of the past and learn how to cook these nutritious—and delicious—organic vegetables properly for a wonderful Thanksgiving side dish.

St. Andrews Waterfront Market
(850) 872-7208
3151 West 10th Street (U.S. hw 98, turn south on Beck Ave., then turn right
Panama City, FL
Zen Garden Market
(850) 234-1651
707 Richard Jackson Blvd.
Panama City Beach, FL
St. Petersburg Saturday Morning Market
(727) 455-4921
Central Avenue, between First and Second
St. Petersburg, FL
Shaolin Gardens, CSA
(407) 432-0511
Osteen, FL
Beaches Green Market
(904) 270-0273
Intersection of A1A and Florida Boulevard; Jarboe Park
Neptune Beach, FL
Bay County Farmers Market
(850) 769-2645, (850) 785-0524
2230 East 15th Street; at the Fairgrounds
Panama City, FL
Aaldmon Farm
(561) 294-5797
Lake Worth, FL
Jacksonville Farmers Market
(904) 354-2821 / (407) 623-1319
1810 West Beaver Street
Jacksonville, FL
Blue Lake Citrus Products, LLC.
(863) 299-3755
PO Box 1849
Winter Haven, FL
Okaloosa County Farmers Market
(850) 689-5850, (850) 689-5727
1958 Lewis Turner Boulevard; Fort Walton Beach Fairgrounds
Fort Walton Beach, FL
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provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Bravo for Brussels Sprouts!

As promised, it’s Organic Brussels Sprouts Week here at Organic Authority. Before you utter an “Ewww!” or an “Ick,” we encourage you to forget traumatic memories of the past and learn how to cook these nutritious—and delicious—organic vegetables properly for a wonderful Thanksgiving side dish.

Many of us have had the same experience as Lachlan Sands, associate chef instructor at the California School of Culinary Arts in Pasadena, California, and a former sous-chef at the Water Grill in Los Angeles—commonly regarded as one of the best seafood restaurants in the country.

“My mother taught me to hate Brussels sprouts,” Chef Sands tells Organic Authority. “They were olive green, mushy, tasted funky and smelled bad. It turns out my experience is not unusual. Many people have never had Brussels sprouts as they should be—bright green, firm, mild and sweet.”

Our mothers ruined them, he says, by making a common culinary mistake: overcooking.

“Brussels sprouts—and all members of the cabbage family—contain sulfur compounds attached to the sugars in the leaves,” he explains. “When you overcook the sprout, these sulfur compounds bust off and give the sprouts a pungent, rotten-egg, cabbage-mustard aroma—and the flavor follows suit. The longer you cook them, the more extreme the effect is.”

Great organic Brussels sprouts begin with proper produce selection.

“First, choose small, compact sprouts,” Chef Sands instructs. “They are not really sweeter than large ones, but becau...

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