about "dill" or what to substitute for it.
A green herb with feathery leaves, called dill weed. The flat tan dill seed is actually the dried fruit of the herb.
Ingredient
Season: available year-round
How to prepare: The flavor is destroyed in heating so add at the end of cooking. Often used in pickles and flavoring fish.
Matches well with: beets, breads, cabbage, carrots, chicken cucumbers, cream sauces, eggs, fish, pickles, potatoes, salmon, scallops, seafood, sour cream, tomatoes, veal
Substitutions: 1 tbsp dill seed = 3 heads fresh or dried dillweed
| Nutrition Facts | ||
|---|---|---|
| Calculated for 1 | ||
| Calories 1158 | ||
| Calories from Fat | (%) | |
| Amount Per Serving | %DV | |
| Total Fat 0.0g | % | |
| Saturated Fat 0.0g | % | |
| Monounsaturated Fat 0.0g | ||
| Polyunsaturated Fat 0.0g | ||
| Trans Fat 0.0g | ||
| Cholesterol 0mg | % | |
| Sodium 0mg | % | |
| Potassium 0mg | % | |
| Total Carbohydrate 0.0g | % | |
| Dietary Fiber 0.0g | % | |
| Sugars 0.0g | ||
| Protein 0.0g | % | |
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