Elecampane[1] is not so elongated as the preceding roots, but more substantial and more pungent; eaten by itself it is very injurious to the stomach, but when mixed with other condiments of a sweet nature, it is extremely wholesome. There are several methods employed for modifying[2] its natural acridity and rendering it agreeable to the palate: thus, for instance, when dried it is reduced to a fine flour, and then mixed with some sweet liquid or other, or else it is boiled in vinegar and water, or kept in soak in it; it is also steeped in various other ways, and then mixed with boiled[3] grape-juice, or else incorporated with honey or raisins, or dates with plenty of meat on them. Other persons, again, have a method of preparing it with quinces, or else sorbs or plums, while sometimes the flavour is varied by the addition of pepper or thyme.
This plant is particularly good for weakness of the stomach,
and it has acquired a high reputation from the circumstance
that Julia[4] Augusta used to eat it daily. The seed of it is
quite useless, as the plant is reproduced, like the reed, from
eyes extracted from the root. This vegetable, as well as the
skirret and the parsnip, is sown both in spring and autumn, a
considerable distance being left between the plants; indeed, for
elecampane, a space of no less than three feet is required, as
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