edible-pod pea
Noun 1. A type of pea plant: A variety of pea plant (Pisum sativum) cultivated for its pods, which are soft, thick, and entirely edible because they lack the tough, fibrous inner lining (parchment layer) found in common garden peas. 2. The pod or seed itself: The edible product of this plant, which can be consumed whole, pod and all, without the need for shelling.
The term "edible-pod pea" is used to specifically categorize and distinguish these peas from standard shelling peas. It is a horticultural and culinary term. * As a crop: Farmers are increasing their cultivation of edible-pod pea varieties due to high market demand. * As a food item: The recipe calls for one cup of sliced edible-pod peas.
- In gardening:
- In cooking:
- In commerce:
- Culinary distinction: The term is often used in seed catalogs and agricultural contexts. In everyday culinary language, more specific names like "snow pea" (flat pods) or "snap pea" (plump pods) are typically used, both of which are subtypes of edible-pod peas.
- Botanical context: In botanical or agricultural writing, it may be contrasted with "shelling pea" or "garden pea" ( var. ).
- Snow pea: A specific type of edible-pod pea with flat, tender pods and very small peas inside, commonly used in Asian stir-fries.
- Snap pea (or Sugar snap pea): A specific type of edible-pod pea with rounded, crunchy, sweet pods and more developed peas inside; the entire pod is eaten.
- Mangetout: A French term (meaning "eat all") used interchangeably, especially in British English, for edible-pod peas, particularly snow peas.
- Shelling pea: The common garden pea, which has a fibrous, inedible pod that must be removed to eat the peas inside. This is the direct antonym in horticulture.
- Pod pea (in specific agricultural contexts)
- Sugar pea (a less precise, generic term sometimes used)
- Whole-pod pea
The core meaning consistently refers to the lack of a fibrous inner lining in the pod. This single characteristic defines the category and differentiates it from common peas. All other names (snow pea, snap pea) are sub-categories within this group.
- a variety of pea plant producing peas having soft thick edible pods lacking the fibrous inner lining of the common pea