Ingredient Spotlight: Hearts of Palm (2024)

Features 2 minutes 24 September 2019

Get to know this unique vegetable.

ingredients

Hearts of palm are a mystery to many but the path to discovering this curious vegetable begins with its name. Harvested from the core of certain varieties of palm trees, hearts of palm are the tender inner stalk found at the tree’s center, or heart. They are native to South and Central America, dating back to Mayan civilizations in that region. Today, hearts of palm grace our plates in salads, dips and a host of other dishes, including as a meat substitute for vegetarians.

Hearts of palm are culled from a handful of palm tree species, including the coconut, açaí and sabal palms. The laborious harvesting process involves cutting down the trees and carefully removing the bark and other fibers until only the tender heart remains. Years of over-harvesting wild hearts of palm led to regulations limiting farmers to harvesting only multi-stemmed palms on farms created specifically to grow them. Palm trees with only a single stem die once they’re cut and the heart is removed, whereas multi-stemmed palms regenerate every two to three years, making them a more environmentally-friendly, sustainable option. Hearts of palm from multi-stemmed palm trees in Costa Rica and Ecuador are the most consumed in the world, with Costa Rica alone exporting more than 16 million pounds each year. Ecuador and Bolivia are also top producers.

Once harvested, the hearts are cut and canned or packed in jars in water or a brining liquid. Fresh hearts of palm are a rare find in most grocery stores. They are extremely perishable when fresh and cost more than $15 per pound. The arduous procedure for harvesting them is a contributing factor to the high cost of the fresh produce.

Hearts of palm have a look unlike any other vegetable, a dull off-white color cut into thin cylinders that are sold whole or sliced. Their flavor is often compared to artichoke hearts, but hearts of palm have a milder, slightly sweet, less acidic bite with a texture that is a delicious mix of crunch and softness. Most often used raw in salads or chopped for use in dips, hearts of palm may also be cooked. They can be pan-fried, seared, grilled and roasted, and are a common ingredient in recipes from Central and South America. Civilizations in those regions were putting the entire palm tree to use thousands of years ago, eating the hearts and using the bark as building materials.

Ingredient Spotlight: Hearts of Palm (1)

Hearts of palm are a common ingredient in recipes from Central and South America.

Vegetarians in search of a meaty texture often look to hearts of palm as an alternative. Shredded hearts of palm can replace crab meat in vegetarian "crab cakes." When shredded and simmered in the appropriate sauce, they can serve as the filling in tacos or sandwiches. A dip in batter before deep frying will yield something similar to calamari.

In addition to their versatility on the plate, hearts of palm are nutritional powerhouses. They are naturally low in calories and high in fiber, protein and fat. Hearts of palm are cholesterol-free and contain a host of other important nutrients like iron, Vitamin C, magnesium and folate, which support digestive and bone health, help stave off anemia and boost your immune system. These nutritional benefits come with a warning. Like most canned vegetables, hearts of palm can be extremely high in sodium. It’s important to rinse them thoroughly once you remove them from the brine to reduce the amount of sodium intake.

Though hearts of palm are tucked on grocery store shelves among the other canned vegetables, they pack a tang, a crunch, versatility and a nutritional punch that separate them from the rest. Do yourself a delicious favor and keep a can or two in your pantry to add an easy burst of flavor to your next dish.

Ingredient Spotlight: Hearts of Palm (2)

Written by Danielle Turner

Danielle Turner is a personal chef, cooking instructor and writer happily eating her way around Washington, D.C. She met her first shallot in culinary school and they’ve been fast friends ever since.

Features

Features 3 minutes

This Three-Acre Farm Fuels Orlando’s MICHELIN Restaurants

Nine ways a small urban family farm regenerates the environment.

Editor's Pick Florida Orlando

Chef Interview Editor's Pick Florida

Features 2 minutes

Introducing Demo: A New-Age Wine Bar in the Heart of the West Village

Meet the new kid on the block bringing innovation to the West Village’s wine bar scene.

bar Editor's Pick

Features 2 minutes

Forest to Table at Bosq in Aspen

Hometown hero and recent One MICHELIN Star recipient Chef Barclay Dodge shares his decades-long passion for foraging.

Chef Interview Colorado Editor's Pick

All articles of Features

Keep Exploring - Stories we think you will enjoy reading

Features 5 minutes

13 Ingredients Chefs are Prioritizing in 2024

New year, new ingredients: chefs, they're just like us.

Chef Interview Editor's Pick Hotels

Features 2 minutes

New Jersey's (No Longer) Secret Ingredient to Michelin-Starred Meals

The Garden State adds zesty citrus to its repertoire with inspired results.

Michelin Guide farmer fruit

Features 1 minute

Will Kombu Save the World?

Kombu is known as a healthy food that is essential for Japanese cuisine, but did you know that it also supports the natural environment in the ocean? We took a close look at the mystery of how kombu protects the planet.

Japan Sustainability ingredients

Features 2 minutes

How To Differentiate Oyster Varieties

Here's how to tell oysters from the US, France and Australia apart.

ingredients

Features 1 minute

Know Your Winter Fruit: Pumpkins and Squash

Halloween is coming soon, a good reason to learn about your favorite winter fruits!

ingredients

Features 3 minutes

Five Ingredients To Try This Year

Our MICHELIN inspectors have rounded up five exciting ingredients to try, in your kitchen or out to eat.

dining out ingredients cooking

Dining In 2 minutes

How To Cook With Alcohol

Chef Gabriel Kreuther explains how he cooks with alcohol—especially wine—at two MICHELIN star restaurant in New York City.

ingredients technique alcohol

Features 1 minute

Pantry Ingredient: Consider Capers

Mini in size but mighty in flavor, capers are intrinsic to a myriad of cuisines and have grown for thousands of years around the Mediterranean, North Africa, and more recently, Southern Australia.

ingredients cooking Mediterranean cuisine

Features 2 minutes

Which Type of Egg Is Best?

Cage-free or free-range? Pasture-raised or organic? Brown or white? Here's what you need to know.

egg ingredients

Features 3 minutes

Inspector Journals: A Taste of My History

A US inspector reflects on the southern Italian tradition of transforming sun-ripened tomatoes into a perennial sauce called la salsa di pomodoro.

ingredients Inspectors

People 1 minute

Stuart Brioza’s Custom-Milled Pancake Mix Stars at State Bird Provisions

Brioza’s mini restaurant empire was built on pancakes.

ingredients One Product One Chef

Features 2 minutes

Cooking with Alcohol

Chef Gabriel Kreuther explains how he uses alcohol—especially wine—in cooking.

cooking ingredients

Features 2 minutes

Ingredient Spotlight: Blood Oranges

The perfect citrus solution to the winter doldrums.

ingredients

  1. MICHELIN Guide
  2. Magazine
  3. Features
  4. Ingredient Spotlight: Hearts of Palm
Ingredient Spotlight: Hearts of Palm (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duane Harber

Last Updated:

Views: 6677

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duane Harber

Birthday: 1999-10-17

Address: Apt. 404 9899 Magnolia Roads, Port Royceville, ID 78186

Phone: +186911129794335

Job: Human Hospitality Planner

Hobby: Listening to music, Orienteering, Knapping, Dance, Mountain biking, Fishing, Pottery

Introduction: My name is Duane Harber, I am a modern, clever, handsome, fair, agreeable, inexpensive, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.