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Chives, Garlic
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartChives, Garlic
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SKU: 0505 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Allium tuberosum
Family: Amaryllidaceae
Origin: China, Japan and India
Medicinal use:It is a vegetable related to the onion. It is grown and used as a substitute for garlic and onion in cooking and is known as “Maroi nakupi”. The flavor is more like garlic chives. The chopped flowers and leaves are usually sprinkled in salads, sandwiches and stews in general. It is delicious for making compound butters and cream cheese.
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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.
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Spinach, Okinawa
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartSpinach, Okinawa
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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.
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Spinach, Brazil
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartSpinach, Brazil
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0705 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Alternanthera sissoo
Family: Amaranthaceae
Origin: S America
Medicinal use:The leaves are crisp, slightly more so than temperate spinach, and not slimy. Some cultivars are slightly bitter. Reportedly, Brazilians generally eat it raw in salads with oil or vinegar, tomato and onion, although the literature recommends cooking it. Sissoo spinach can be added to quiches, cakes, curries, dals, pasta sauces, lasagna, or added to dishes and stir-fries at the end of the cooking process as a substitute for spinach and to add a nutty flavor.
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