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Chives
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartChives
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0500 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Allium schoenoprasum
Family: Amaryllidaceae
Origin: Europe, Asia and N America
Medicinal use:Chives are eaten raw in salads, cooked, or prepared in various pickles and also as a culinary condiment; it is generally used dehydrated to flavor soups and stews
32 in stock
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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.
55 in stock
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Spinach, Malabar Green
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Read moreSpinach, Malabar Green
₡1,900.00
SKU: 0715 Category: Culinary GardenScientific name: Basella alba
Family: Basellaceae
Origin: India
Medicinal use:It is a perennial vine, popular in several tropical countries for its edible leaf, unrelated to the commonly known terrestrial spinach. Widely used in Asian cuisine, the culinary possibilities of Malabar spinach include its use to thicken soups, fry or stew with garlic and chili peppers, in salads or steamed with tofu and ginger.
Out of stock
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Spinach, Okinawa
Culinary Garden ₡1,900.00 Add to cartSpinach, 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.
36 in stock