What’s your favorite underrated ingredient?
January 16, 2025 by DarcieJust as cooks have a favorite spice that flies under the radar, they also have a favorite ingredient that gets overlooked by others. For me, it’s parsley. While it is frequently relegated to being a sad, wilted sprig of garnish in midrate restaurants, parsley possess a get-along-with-everyone flavor that warrants at least co-starring status and can even shine as the main attraction. I think parsley is an unsung hero in the kitchen that is often just a mere afterthought.

Parsley frequently co-stars as part of a mixed herb ensemble in dishes like kuku sabzi (Persian herb frittata/omelet), in sauces like chimichurri and zhoug, and paired with mint in tabbouleh. However, it can handle a solo role as well. It is usually the only herb in gremolata and is frequently flying by itself in tarator. Basil may get all the glory in pesto, but substitute parsley in the sauce and you’ll have a dish with a different kind of zing. In fact, you can swap parsley for most soft herbs like mint and cilantro/coriander with great success. It has a fresh, vibrant flavor that can bring zest into a dreary winter day.
Another benefit of parsley is that it is rarely a controversial ingredient. Unlike cilantro, which can be divisive, parsley is rarely despised. I’ve heard plenty of people say they hate cilantro (one even briefly ran a website called ihatecilantro.com), but I can’t recall anyone dissing parsley. It’s easier to grow than either basil or cilantro – almost as easy as mint and much less invasive. It pairs well with an astonishing variety of flavors and is at home in almost any cuisine. Parsley is readily found at almost any supermarket and is affordable. Although Italian parsley is often considered superior, I think curly parsley is wonderful and in some dishes more attractive. In fact, I will wager that most people couldn’t tell the difference between the two in most dishes flavor-wise.
While it is unusual to see parsley in a dessert, the herb is so versatile that even dessert is not a bridge too far. Yotam Ottolenghi uses it in Pineapple and herb sorbet with candied fennel, it stars in Brooks Headley’s Parsley gelato, it is paired with watermelon in Watermelon & parsley pops and co-stars with lemon in Parsley-lemonade ice pops. I like parsley so much I sometimes snack on it while preparing dinner. What’s your favorite underrated ingredient?
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