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Eggplant
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartEggplant
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0310 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Solanum melongena
Family: Solanaceae
Origin: S Asia
Medicinal use: The consumption of eggplant is recommended after a brief cooking and with its skin properly washed previously, since it is in this last part of the eggplant where antioxidants and fiber are found in greater proportions. We can include eggplant in a sauté, a sauce, an omelette, a vegetarian curry or, in a tasty salad. Eggplant is a very low-calorie vegetable because it has more than 90% water.
6 in stock
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Nasturtium
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartNasturtium
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0460 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Tropaeolum majus
Family: Tropeolaceae
Origin: S America
Medicinal use: In the kitchen, its tender leaves and very finely chopped flowers are used in soups and salads, giving a fresh and spicy flavor reminiscent of pepper or mustard. The flowers, due to their pleasant taste and appearance, are used to decorate meat, fish, salads and vegetables dishes. The plant is especially rich in vitamins and minerals and a remedy used to cleanse the blood, as it supports the body in its detoxification. The flavor of the leaves is slightly spicy. Optically, its crumbled leaves also enrich pasta dishes and pizzas.
10 in stock
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Cilantro, Wild
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartCilantro, Wild
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0650 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Eryngium foetidum
Family: Apiaceae
Origin: Mexico and S America
Medicinal use:The leaves are used fresh, whole or chopped, as a substitute for coriander and parsley. In Panama, it is mixed with parsley, garlic, onion and chives to prepare “green recao”, a condiment widely used in the preparation of various stews, sauces and soups.
34 in stock
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Out of Stock
Spinach, Okinawa
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Read moreSpinach, Okinawa
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0720 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Gynura bicolor
Family: Asteraceae
Origin: S and SE Asia
Medicinal use:In Japan, Gynura bicolor is eaten as local vegetables in Ishikawa, Kumamoto and Okinawa and so on, it is lightly blanched and served with ponzu, as an ingredient in miso or tempura soup, the leaves are sautéed with sesame oil and ginger ( both hot foods). The stems and roots of the plant can also be made into tea by boiling them with water.
Out of stock