lettuce

     

The Lettuce (Lactuca sativa) is a temperate annual or biennial plant of the aisy family Asteraceae. It is most often grown as a leaf vegetable. In many countries, it is typically eaten cold and raw, in salads, hamburgers, tacos, and many other dishes. In some places, including China, lettuce is typically eaten cooked and use of the stem is as important as use of the leaf. Both the English name and the Latin name of the genus are ultimately derived from lac, the Latin word for “milk”, referring to the plant’s milky juice. Mild in flavour, it has been described over the centuries as a cooling counterbalance to other ingredients in a salad.

Trivia about lettuce

  • The head varieties of this vegetable are divided into butterhead & crisphead
  • I'm taking this, the usual basis of green salads, braising it & serving it au gratin
  • Bibb & butterhead are not an MTV cartoon duo, but varieties of this vegetable
  • Vegetarians in search of vitamins A & C know butterhead & crisphead are 2 of its general classifications
  • Laitue (this) goes into une salade
  • Eat a salad with this vegetable that can be classified as butterhead, crisphead, leaf or Romaine
  • The price of a head of iceberg this was a buck-69 last time I shopped
  • If in a hurry, grab a prewashed salad mix, perhaps with the red leaf & green leaf types of this
  • Romaine & leaf, aka loose-leaf, are types of this salad starter
  • The signature appetizer at P.F. Chang's is chicken in cups of this vegetable
  • Boston,Bibb,iceberg
  • Let's start you off with a simple salad of this veggie that comes in butterhead & crisphead varieties
  • Iceberg & Romaine are 2 of the most common varieties of this salad vegetable
  • A scholarly paper on punning restaurant names was titled "Dew Drop Inn and" this vegetable "Entertain You"
  • Lactuca sativa, it's also a slang term for paper money
  • "Cabbage" & this other basic salad ingredient are both slang for paper money
  • The name of this salad ingredient probably comes from the Latin lactuca
  • Some think a "Seinfeld" episode was based on Ulva lactuca, the sea type of this seen here in its salad days

Found pages about lettuce