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  2. How to Grow Rhubarb - AOL

    www.aol.com/grow-rhubarb-171017423.html

    Mature rhubarb plants will send up towering flower stalks in early summer, with tight clusters of buds that open to pink flowers. You can let it flower if you wish, but if your goal is a large ...

  3. Rhubarb - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhubarb

    Rhubarb is the fleshy, edible stalks of species and hybrids (culinary rhubarb) of Rheum in the family Polygonaceae, which are cooked and used for food. [2] The plant is a herbaceous perennial that grows from short, thick rhizomes. Historically, different plants have been called "rhubarb" in English.

  4. Rheum rhabarbarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheum_rhabarbarum

    Rheum rhabarbarum is a species of flowering plant in the family Polygonaceae, native to a region stretching from southern Siberia to north and central China. [1] It has been harvested from the wild for centuries for its root, which was harvested for use as a popular medicine in Europe and Asia.

  5. Rheum (plant) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheum_(plant)

    The genus includes the vegetable [3] rhubarb. The species have large somewhat triangular shaped leaves with long, fleshy petioles. The flowers are small, greenish-white to rose-red, and grouped in large compound leafy inflorescences. Many rhubarb cultivars have been domesticated as medicinal plants and for human consumption.

  6. Beware: Your Rhubarb Can Potentially Make You Sick - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/beware-rhubarb-potentially...

    Forget Punxsutawney Phil and the first bloom of flowers; the real indicator of spring is the influx of seasonal produce. ... Rhubarb isn’t the only vegetable with toxic leaves.

  7. What Is Rhubarb, and How Do I Cook With It? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/rhubarb-cook-220034009.html

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  8. Forcing (horticulture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forcing_(horticulture)

    Cold frames and greenhouses are also methods of warming plants in order to force them. Greenhouses that were used specifically for growing off-season plants were sometimes known as forcing houses. [6] In the Rhubarb Triangle area of West Yorkshire, England, forced rhubarb is commercially grown in dark sheds and harvested by candlelight. [7]

  9. Rheum palmatum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rheum_palmatum

    Loosely branched clusters of matured red flowers found on the lobed-leafed Chinese rhubarb. Habit of Rheum palmatum. Its lobed leaves are large, jagged and hand-shaped, growing in width to two feet, but sometimes up to a full meter (3ft 3in) in width and length). The tiny pink flowers are in panicles up to five feet (1.5 meters) in height. [6]