Leafy greens (salad)·Foundational·Year-round

Arugula

Eruca vesicaria

Peppery, mustardy, slightly bitter; pungency increases with leaf maturity; sweeter when cooked briefly.

Category
Leafy greens (salad)
Peak form
Raw salad with lemon, olive oil, parmesan; or piled on hot p
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
10

About Arugula

Arugula (rocket in British English, rucola in Italian) is the defining peppery salad green of Italian and Mediterranean cuisine. The peppery-mustardy bite comes from glucosinolates — the same compound family that gives radishes their heat. Two distinct culinary uses: large mature arugula leaves for vegetable-density salads (often dressed simply with lemon, olive oil, shaved parmesan), and baby arugula (clamshell-packaged in American supermarkets) for milder salad applications and as a pizza topping. The wild arugula variety (selvatica) is more pungent and serrated than cultivated arugula and prized in Italian regional cooking.

Variety profile

Botanical
Eruca vesicaria
Flavor
Peppery, mustardy, slightly bitter; pungency increases with leaf maturity; sweeter when cooked briefly.
Texture
Tender raw with delicate bite; wilts immediately under heat; baby leaves are crisp-tender, mature leaves chewier.
Peak form
Raw salad with lemon, olive oil, parmesan; or piled on hot pizza/pasta to wilt slightly.
Season window
Spring and fall peaks (bolts in heat); year-round greenhouse-supplemented.

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

Baby arugula sold in clamshells loses flavor within days; mature bunches from farmers markets are significantly more peppery and last longer.

Cross-references

Related categories