You can hear it on Belgian markets the moment April hits. “Asparagus, ma’am? Fresh from this morning.” The crates come out, the white spears are stacked like ivory, and every cook from Hasselt to Heist suddenly has a plan for Sunday lunch.
White asparagus season is not a niche ingredient moment. It is a national mood. Six weeks of pale, sweet, slightly bitter spears, gone before you know it. And every year, the same question lands in our DMs: “How do I actually season white asparagus so it tastes like more than warm water?”
That is the honest problem. White asparagus is delicate. It is not a flavour bomb. It needs a partner that lifts the sweetness without burying it.
Serves 2 as a starter, or 2 as a generous main with bread and a glass of cold Riesling.
Ingrédients
- 500 g white asparagus (look for tight tips and squeaky-fresh stalks)
- 80 g good unsalted butter
- 2 tsp Gardener’s Harvest
- 2 large eggs
- 1 lemon, zest of half plus a squeeze
- Sea salt
- Cracked black pepper
- Optional: a fine pinch of Black Magic Garlic Salt to finish
Préparation
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Peel the asparagus
Peel from just under the tip down to the base. Be generous. White asparagus has a tough skin and you will regret keeping any of it. Snap off the woody ends.
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Simmer the spears
Bring a wide pan of salted water to a gentle simmer. Add a small piece of butter and half the lemon, squeezed in. Slide the spears in flat. Cook for 8 to 12 minutes, depending on thickness, until the tip of a knife slips in with a soft, slightly resistant give. Do not overcook. Mushy asparagus is heartbreak.
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Soft-boil the eggs
While the spears cook, soft-boil the eggs. 6 minutes 30 seconds in already-simmering water. Cool under the tap so the yolks stay just-set and golden.
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Make the herb butter
Melt the butter in a small pan over low heat until it is foaming gently and smells nutty. Pull it off the heat. Stir in the 2 tsp of Gardener’s Harvest. Let it sit for one minute. The herbs will bloom in the warm fat and the kitchen will start to smell like a market garden.
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Plate the asparagus
Lift the asparagus out, pat dry with a clean tea towel, and lay them on warmed plates.
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Finish and serve
Halve the eggs straight onto the spears. Spoon the herb butter over everything generously. Finish with lemon zest, a crack of pepper, and, if you want a real flex, a tiny pinch of Black Magic Garlic Salt across the tips. Eat with a hunk of bread for mopping. Do not skip the bread step.
Chef’s Tip
Toast your Gardener’s Harvest in the butter, do not just sprinkle it on cold. Dried herbs and shallots come alive in warm fat. That one minute of sitting in the foaming butter is the difference between herbs that taste dusty and herbs that taste alive. The same trick works for soft-boiled eggs on toast, roasted carrots, anything you would otherwise just throw raw chopped chives at.
Why butter alone falls flat
Classic Flemish style is melted butter, hard-boiled egg, a turn of pepper. It is gorgeous. It is also a little quiet. Butter coats. Butter softens. But butter does not give you the green, bright, slightly oniony lift that makes the spears taste like spring on a plate.
That is what the herbs are for. Dill cuts through the dairy. Parsley brings clean grassiness. Chives add a soft allium note that loves anything pale and sweet. Shallots round it out with that warm, rounded onion sweetness you would otherwise have to chop fresh and tear up over.
Gardener’s Harvest is built for this
Gardener’s Harvest is our spring herb blend, and it was honestly made with this exact moment in mind. Dill, parsley, chives, shallots, all dried at peak season so the flavour stays sharp. No fillers. No salt to throw off your butter. Just the four ingredients you would chop fresh, ready to scatter.
It pairs with white asparagus the way a good linen napkin pairs with a Sunday table. It belongs there.
A teaspoon stirred through warm butter turns into the herb butter you wish your grandmother had taught you to make. Two pinches over the finished plate, and the dish suddenly looks like something off a bistro menu in Bruges.
More ways to use Gardener’s Harvest this season
Spring pasta. Toss hot tagliatelle with butter, lemon, peas, and a heavy spoon of Gardener’s Harvest. Five minutes, end to end.
Scrambled eggs. Stir half a teaspoon into the pan in the last thirty seconds. Suddenly your weekday breakfast tastes like a Sunday brunch.
Pan-fried fish. Season white fish with salt, pan-fry in butter, finish with a generous sprinkle of Gardener’s Harvest the second it comes out of the pan.
The umami finish, if you want to go further
If your table likes a savoury edge, a tiny pinch of Black Magic Garlic Salt over the finished plate is the move. Fermented black garlic plus sea salt plus a whisper of lemon zest. It rounds out the herb butter with a deep, almost mushroomy note that flatters the asparagus without fighting it. Use it like jewellery, not like seasoning. Three or four flakes per spear, no more.
White asparagus season is short. Cook the spears tonight, scatter the herbs like you mean it, and tell us how it lands.
What are you pairing your white asparagus with this week? Tag us on Instagram @zestspices and we will repost our favourites.