Salad rocket is more than a leaf that makes a cheese sandwich upmarket. Our five fascinating facts reveal a history peppered with sex, drugs, rocket and rolls…
Rocket science
There are two main variants of rocket: the familiar, cultivated ‘salad rocket’ varieties that go by the scientific name eruca sativa and its hot, wild cousin, christened diplotaxis tenuifolia. Both types have numerous international aliases, including roquette, arugula, colewort, rucola, jaramango and Italian cress (cultivated); wall rocket, arugula sylvetta and crack mustard (wild).
Rocket fuel
Packed with vitamins and antioxidants, rocket is a nutritious fuel for the mind, body and especially the skin. Some folk have even been known to smear themselves with fresh leaves for a natural deodorant, while others claim it can make freckles vanish.
Rocket power
Throughout history most foodstuffs seem to have been declared an aphrodisiac by some culture or other. Rocket rates pretty high on the list of Mediterraneans’ love drug – its aphrodisiac powers even caused it to be banned from Italian monasteries in the 12th centuries. At other times followers of Priapus, the Greco-Roman god of fertility, planted the hot potion around his statue to give him a helping hand, as evidenced in this quote from Roman author Columnella: “Th’eruca, Priapus, near thee we sow, to arouse to duty husbands who are slow”.
Rocket man
In America the rapid rise of rocket’s popularity has been seen as an indication of a growing culture of professional elitism. President Obama caused a bit of a peppery stink when he was said to have complained about the price of rocket, with political commentators naturally dubbing the scandal ‘arugula-gate’.
Bottle rocket
Besides enjoying its mustardy leaves in a cheese roll we’ll be bottling our harvest by making the Italian rocket liqueur ‘rucola’ or ‘rucolino’. This involves stuffing it in vodka with sugar, lemon peel and a few cloves.
Seeds sown: rocket ‘olivetta’, Mr Fothergill’s
So, what became of the rucolino you made? I want to make some too but I need some guidance. Maybe you have some advice, a recipe, or a website you can share.
It was so good we put the recipe in out book, Brew it Yourself
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1848992270/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1436729317&sr=8-1&keywords=brew+it+yourself
I’ll see if I can dig out a PDF of the relevant page and send it over to you