How to Clean, Trim, and Prepare Artichokes

With the right tools and know-how it's easy to get artichokes ready for eating.

Close-up of a trimmed artichoke, with cut-off leaves (bracts) on the right hand side of the image.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Everything about the artichoke—the edible flower bud of a plant in the thistle family—suggests that it doesn't want to be eaten. How else to explain the armor-like petals,* prickly thorns, and throat-clogging choke? It's enough to scare off even the most intrepid cook.

*Technically, they'rebracts, not petals.

But the reality is that preparing artichokes is easy as long as you know how to go about it. Like a lion tamer, with the right tools and approach, you will prevail (and if you don't, you'll make a damned fine viral news story).

Close-up of many untrimmed artichokes in a metal pan.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Here are three ways to go about prepping artichokes. One involves cleaning down to the hearts, one is the trimming you'd do before steaming and serving whole, and the third is what's needed for flower-likeRoman-Jewish fried artichokes(carciofi alla giudia).

Note that in all cases, I recommend wearing latex gloves if you have them. While not essential, the gloves keep your skin free of the artichoke's bitter raw fluids, which have a way of tainting any other food you touch after handling the artichokes.

Before you start, fill a large bowl with cold water. Squeeze a couple lemons into it, and drop the lemon halves into the water. I also keep one half of a lemon off to the side in case I need it for rubbing on the cut sides of the artichoke—the citric acid can sometimes help slow browning due to oxidation.

Cleaning Down to the Hearts

Some artichoke recipes call for just the tender hearts and stems, which means trimming the artichoke of every tough, inedible part. If your plan is to steam your artichokes and nibble on each leaf before getting to the heart, this is not the method for you: Scroll on down to the steps for minimally trimming artichokes for basic steaming. But if you want the tender hearts and stems only, follow along here.

When I first published this article, I recommended a method that used the knife more aggressively. With practice, that method is faster, but the risk of accidentally cutting into the heart is greater, particularly if you’re not very experienced with it. In a commercial kitchen, speed matters, but at home you can usually spare a couple extra minutes, especially if it gets you better results.

Step 1: Pull Off Leaves

Collage of removing outer leaves (bracts) from artichoke, beginning with tough, green outermost leaves and finishing with softer, yellow leaves inside.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Start by pulling off the artichoke’s leaves (again, technically, they're bracts) until you get down to the very fine, thin yellow leaves in the center. This should expose much of the heart.

Step 2: Cut Off Stem (or Don’t)

Gloved hands slicing off stem end of an artichoke on a wooden cutting board.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

With aserrated knife(or a paring knife), cut off the stem where it meets the base, and set it aside. You can also leave it attached, if you like, in which case you will need to trim the stem and heart together. TheY-peelertrick (below) is helpful for doing that without gouging the heart or edible core of the stem.

Step 3: Cut Off Remaining Bracts (Leaves)

A gloved hand and a knife trimming the heart of an artichoke.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Using the same serrated knife, cut off the fine yellow bracts just above where they meet the heart.

Step 4: Trim Heart of Green Bits

Collage of gloved hands holding a paring knife, rotating around an artichoke heart to cut off remaining bracts.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

With a paring knife, carefully trim the top and sides of the artichoke. Your goal is to cut away any remaining green parts; go slowly and carefully so that you don't accidentally gouge the heart itself.

If you’ve left the stem attached, you’ll need to trim it at the same time.

Step 5: Remove Furry Choke

A gloved hand scooping out the furry choke from an artichoke using a small cookie scoop, with artichokes visible in the background.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

接下来,去除阻塞本身。这是毛茸茸的uff in the center of the heart that would have eventually bloomed into a flower had the artichoke not been picked while still a bud. You can do this with a spoon, but a large melon baller, cookie scoop, or ice cream scoop with a thin metal edge works even better—that thin edge shaves the choke out more effectively than the dull edge of a spoon. (If the scoop has an ejection lever, it’s also handy here for shooting out the choke trimmings into the garbage.)

A gloved hand using a small cookie scoop to dump out the furry choke from an artichoke, with discarded artichoke leaves visible in the background.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Step 6: Trim Heart More If Needed, Then Soak

A gloved hand holding a fully cleaned artichoke heart.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

You may need to pick up your paring knife again to clean up the last bits of the heart. What's left is the cleaned artichoke heart, all totally edible and ready for cooking. Drop it in your lemon water to prevent it from browning.

Cleaned artichoke hearts floating with lemon halves in a metal bowl of water.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Step 7: Trim Stem, If Separate

Collage of trimming artichoke stem: slicing off end with a serrated knife, slicing off tough exterior with a paring knife.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Finally, if you’ve removed the stem, use the paring knife to trim away the tough green outer portion and reveal the tender white core within.

重复你的剩余的洋蓟,然后厨师the hearts as desired.

The Y-Peeler Trick

A gloved hand peeling the stem of an artichoke with a yellow Y-peeler.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Do you own a Y-peeler? If you don't, you should—in fact,Y-peelers are an essential kitchen tool for all sorts of reasons.

If you've got one, use it to make the artichoke-cleaning process even easier: Instead of using a paring knife, trim the heart (after pulling off the leaves and trimming off the top and bottom with a serrated knife) with the Y-peeler. One of the benefits of the peeler is that there's no risk of accidentally gouging the heart or stem with an overly deep knife cut. And, because there's no worry about gouging, you can trim the whole thing a lot faster.And, because the blade swivels, it can navigate the curved parts with ease. Unfortunately, other types of vegetable peelers will be more difficult to use here.

Trimming for Steaming

I'll be frank: When I steam an artichoke, I don't go through all of this trouble. I just cut off the top, then steam the thing and eat it. But some folks prefer a slightly more polished presentation, including removing the thorns from the leaf ends and giving the artichoke an overall trim. If that sounds appealing to you, here's how to do it.

Collage of trimming an artichoke for steaming: slicing off top, trimming thorny tips of leaves with shears, slicing off stem, and peeling stem.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Step 1: Trim Off the Top

Start as above, by using a serrated knife to cut off the top third of the artichoke.

Step 2: Snip Bract (Leaf) Tips

Then, with a pair of goodkitchen shears, cut off the top portion of each leaf to remove the thorny part.

Step 3: Remove or Trim the Stem

If you want the artichoke to sit flat, cut off the stem right at the base of the artichoke. I don't like wasting the stem, so I just trim the dry bottom off with a serrated or paring knife, then peel it with a paring knife or Y-peeler, as you can see in the photo above. It won't sit flat, but it still steams well and tastes just as good.

A gloved hand holding an artichoke trimmed for steaming on a wooden cutting board, balanced on a portion of trimmed stem

Now the artichoke is ready for steaming.

Trimming for Roman-Jewish Fried Artichokes

This is the least common of the preparation methods shown here, but it's handy to see it demonstrated in case you ever want to prepare the classic Roman dish known ascarciofi alla giudia(Jewish-style artichokes).

The method is something of a cross between the two others above: The artichokes aren't trimmed all the way down to the heart, but the toughest portions are removed so that what's left is entirely edible.

A whole, untrimmed large artichoke next to a whole, untrimmed baby artichoke on a wooden surface.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

In these photos, I'm using a baby artichoke, but you can also do this with full-size ones.

Start by pulling off the outermost, dark-green leaves to expose the lighter, more tender ones within.

Gloved hands holding a baby artichoke with the tough, green outer leaves removed.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

然后,用削皮刀,切开每片叶子to cut off the top, turning the artichoke in your hand as you go. Your goal is to leave the tender, edible lower portion of each leaf attached, while removing the tough, thorn-tipped tops. With a little practice, you can quickly turn the artichoke, almost as if it's on a lathe, while the knife just holds steady, slicing through each leaf as it comes around.

Collage of trimming inedible, thorny tips of leaves on a baby artichoke by rotating a paring knife around the artichoke.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Once you've gotten most of the leaves trimmed like this, you can slice through the top portion of the remaining center leaves. The artichoke should look something like a closed rosebud.

Close-up of a fully trimmed baby artichoke.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Trim the stem, using either a paring knife or a Y-peeler to remove all the tough green exterior.

Collage of trimming stem on a cleaned baby artichoke: slicing off tough green stem with a paring knife, peeling with a Y-peeler, rubbing cleaned artichoke with lemon.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

If you're using baby artichokes, or the thorn-free variety used in Rome (calledcimaroli), the artichoke will be ready for cooking and eating at this point. If you have large, thorny artichokes with full chokes in the center, you'll want to remove those, too, by scooping them out with a spoon. This is easiest after the first frying stage, when the leaves have softened and are ready to be spread open like a flower.

Once again, you can rub these with lemon if you need to. As each artichoke is done, drop it in your bowl of cold lemon water, and cover with a clean, wet kitchen towel to keep the artichokes submerged.

If you have a big artichoke already floating in that water, as I did after prepping these for the photos, it'll look like a mama artichoke with her little brood of baby artichoke-lings. So cute!

A trimmed large artichoke floating in water with cleaned baby artichokes and lemon halves.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

March 2015

This article, originally published in 2015, has been updated with new photos and a slightly different method for cleaning the chokes down to the heart.