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Celtuce: a vegetable that resembles a green magic wand.
With it’s beautiful emerald green color, crisp and refreshing texture, with delicious, mild, and faintly nutty taste and smell, Celtuce is the best vegetable you’re not eating.
What the heck is it? Well, besides from resembling a strange green wand, often with runty little lettuce leaves on top, celtuce is what I’d describe as a stem vegetable, a type of food that we’re not used to eating in the U.S..
I learned about celtuce from Chef Michel Bras (his cook book is old school, and probably the most valuable as a reference for professional chefs) but it’s most commonly known in asian cuisine.
Basically, celtuce is indeed a type of lettuce, but, instead of the lettuce being grown for it’s leaves, the stem is harvested and cooked instead. The leaves are edible too, but as celtuce often has quite a journey to get to specialty grocery stores and ethnic markets, the leaves will usually be wilted and unattractive by the time the get to market.
If you’re wondering why you’ve never seen it, it’s probably because this stuff can be hard to find, especially if you shop at American grocery stores.
Find celtuce at an Asian grocery store
Americans, as a general rule, don’t have an appreciation for vegetables compared to many other cultures around the world.
To get exposed to some new, exciting ingredients, take a trip to a local Asian market. You’ll find the vegetables lack a homogenous quality, and, are generally super cheap. A cheap price for veggies does not insinuate a lack of quality, but thats another story.
All their veggies are subject to the same inspection as other U.S. grocery stores. I shop at Asian markets for most of my vegetables (not meat though) and have never had a problem, just be choosy like you would anywhere else.
Bitter Celtuce
One year, I bought celtuce from an adventurous farmer in Wisconsin. The celtuce looked exactly like the stuff I purchased from the asian market, but, eaten raw, it was intensely bitter.
After cooking though, it had a superior flavor to the asian market celtuce, a bit like toasted sunflower seeds or creamy nuts. I haven’t tasted a variety with a similar flavor since.
How to peel and cook
Preparing this stuff is easy, but know that the outer skin is tough, and you’ll struggle to peel it without a quality peeler. After you peel it, you’ll need to peel it again to get underneath the fibers that lie under the skin to reveal the beautiful, jewel-colored heart.
You can also just cut it into sections with a sharp paring knife, and make it square, which makes the cutting and shaving on a mandoline I’m going to describe for you is really easy.
Three easy techniques: shaved, julienned, and peeled
Shaved
Shaving is the most even, and also the first step of a nice julienne, or matchstick cut. To make it easier, you can cut the celtuce stalk into a rectangle for perfect square sides, if you like.

Use a mandoline for even slices.
Julienned
After you shave the celtuce on a mandoline, you can cut them into lengths of a few inches, stack the slices together, and cut into matchsticks as fine as you like. The finer the julienne, the more delicate the texture will be. This is a great beginning for a cole-slaw, but don’t even think about adding mayonnaise to it!
Peeled
This is the easiest way to make a shaved celtuce salad, which could also double as chilled vegetable noodles. Cut the celtuce into manageable lengths, then sqaure them off, and use a vegetable peeler to make paper-thin ribbons.
Recipes
The best thing you can do to taste celtuce’s sutble, slightly nutty taste is to do as little as possible to it, season it lightly, and don’t get too creative.
Also, some sources online might suggest soaking cut celtuce in water to make it crisp, but this will ruin and dilute the flavor, leaving you with a crisp, but watery, bland finished product. For inspiration, look to China, and other vegetables with a similar texture. For example, you could use celtuce anywhere you’d use the following vegetables:
- Kohlrabi
- Cucumbers
- Celery
- Radishes
For flavor pairings, think cool, refreshing, and cold preparations. Celtuce would love to be shaved into a vegetable slaw, or quickly tossed with a light, oil-based dressing, and a dash of something sweet. The first time I worked with it, I thought it smelled a bit like sunflower seeds, so I used that as my inspiration.

A simple dressing of pounded, toasted sunflower seeds, their aromatic oil, a hint of spearmint, and a touch of sweetness.
Traditionally you might see celtuce paired with sesame, and that’s great too, but as sesame is stronger tasting than sunflower seeds, you won’t taste the natural flavor as much, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing.
My favorite prep for these so far is a fine julienne, seasoned with a paste of sunflower seeds, a touch of maple sugar, and virgin sunflower oil, similar to Japanese gomae made with spinach.
Celtuce, With Brown Butter And Lemon
Ingredients
- 1 qt vegetable stock
- 2 whole stalks of celtuce with leaves attached
- Kosher salt to taste
- 3 tbsp high quality unsalted butter
- 1 tbsp fresh squeezed lemon juice
Instructions
- With a vegetable peeled, peel the celtuce. You will notice that after one round with the vegetable peeler there is still a layer of light colored stem, peel the celtuce again to remove this, it's very stringy and hard.
- Continue peeling the celtuce until only the light green, translucent core remains, then cut the core into 2 inch pieces.
- Heat the vegetable broth in a 3 qt or similar sauce pot and season to taste with salt. add the celtuce and cook for 10-15 minutes, or until tender when pierced. Do no over cook the celtuce, or it will fall apart.
- Remove the celtuce from the broth and dry. Up to here this can all be done hours, or days beforehand.
- Heat the butter in a saute pan. When it begins to brown add the celtuce and cook, turning occasionally, until lightly browned on each side. Remove the celtuce from the pan and keep warm while you quickly cook the leaves.
- Add the reserved leaves to the pan and toss, just long enough to wilt, 30 seconds or so.
- Place the leaves on the plate, top with the celtuce stems, then add the lemon to remaining butter in the pan, swirl to warm through. Drizzle on some of the lemon butter and serve immediately, finishing with a touch of salt.
Interesting. Alan, let me suggest something, then: If you find a wild lettuce w/a thick stalk that’s got a bitter but edible core (so maybe not too old but still growing), try treating it as you did celtuce. I wonder if it would come out very similar.
Sam Schaperow, M.S.
PsychologyCT.com
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/plantforagers
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mushroomtalk
Hi Sam, good to have you back. I don’t personally know of any wild lettuce that would have a stem similar to celtuce, but I definitely dig your idea. It is so interesting how this plant changes from incredibly bitter to sweet and nutty with nothing more than a bit of cooking.
Living in China, this stuff can be found just about anywhere. A few more preparation suggestions:
As you noted, the flavor of Celtuce is unique and really tasty. Simply cutting it into quarter-inch-or-less-thick slices and stir-frying in your favorite high-temperature cooking oil with some salt is good enough. If it seems at risk of burning, add some water and put a lid on the wok.
If that’s too bland, doing the above and adding some garam masala to the mix, plus a dash of brown Chinese vinegar can add some flavor.
Finally, you can cut it into long, thin strips, mince some green onions and garlic, and toss them all together. Then, flash-fry some sichuan peppercorn in hot peanut oil. Then, once the sichuan peppercorn’s fragrance reaches your nose, take it off the heat and dump the peppercorn and peanut oil over the celtuce/onion/garlic mix.
I rarely prefer celtuce any more heavily than that, given it’s already very healthy and it’s not a vegetable that gets much better if you add more to it.
Hi Dave, these are some great suggestions! Thanks for chiming in.
I’ve been browsing celtuce articles for about an hour here and right before I found yours I found one that mentioned that all the sweetness is at the outside of the stalk or even in the skin. So it may be that peeling it makes it more bitter, because the bitterness is concentrated at the center. I’ll be testing that when I can get my hands on some! Your recipe looks pretty darn good. 🙂
Hey, you can definitely eat celtuce raw. the skin and white sap are bitter, but if you peel it far enough back, its sweet and mild
The celtuce I buy at the Asian market is definitely sweet raw. But the species farmers were growing around here was absolutely, horribly bitter even after peeling. After cooking the flavor of the locally grown stuff was noticeably different: it was intensely nutty after cooking, with a sunflower or aster-esque flavor, not mild and near innert like the Asian market variety.
I just grew some, it was as easy to grow as lettuce, so far I ‘ve just been peeling and and eating it, will definitely grow again!
I don’t peel the lettuce stems. I cut in 1/4 inch slices, sauté with chili flakes, minced garlic and salt in canola oil. The slices don’t brown much but pick up the flavors and aromas. I then put in a bowl and bake for 45 minutes at 250 degrees,
As an aside, the stem slices would be very effective in sinigang (the tamarind version).