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#1
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New Zealand spinach
We've been given a dustbin liner filled with this. The giver suggested we
make soup from it but what I want to know from anyone who grows this, is, do we use the stalks, some part of the stalk, discard all of the stalks? Anyone know? -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
#2
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In article ,
Sacha wrote: We've been given a dustbin liner filled with this. The giver suggested we make soup from it but what I want to know from anyone who grows this, is, do we use the stalks, some part of the stalk, discard all of the stalks? Anyone know? In my view, all parts can be used, and are best composted. You don't normally use the stalk, but can as far as I know. I used to grow it, but each my spinach-loving wife didn't like it. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#3
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On 10/9/04 9:00, in article , "Nick
Maclaren" wrote: In article , Sacha wrote: We've been given a dustbin liner filled with this. The giver suggested we make soup from it but what I want to know from anyone who grows this, is, do we use the stalks, some part of the stalk, discard all of the stalks? Anyone know? In my view, all parts can be used, and are best composted. Oh dear! You don't normally use the stalk, but can as far as I know. I used to grow it, but each my spinach-loving wife didn't like it. The chap who grows it on a nearby allotment says he started it because it doesn't bolt like ordinary spinach but that he now has a jungle of it! I think we'll have to at least try the soup idea because he's going to ask what we think of it! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
#4
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I seem to remember growing New Zealand spinach about 40 yrs ago. If I
remember the leaves are thicker than the ordinary varieties. If picked young they are just as good as any other variety. From memory I believe that it was grown chiefly as it was the best variety for freezing. -- David Hill Abacus nurseries www.abacus-nurseries.co.uk |
#5
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On 10/9/04 9:41, in article , "David Hill"
wrote: I seem to remember growing New Zealand spinach about 40 yrs ago. If I remember the leaves are thicker than the ordinary varieties. If picked young they are just as good as any other variety. From memory I believe that it was grown chiefly as it was the best variety for freezing. That's the stuff. The friend who gave it to us said that it cooks down to give more bulk than normal spinach - if that sentence makes any sense! -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
#6
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In article , Sacha writes: | On 10/9/04 9:41, in article , "David Hill" | wrote: | | I seem to remember growing New Zealand spinach about 40 yrs ago. If I | remember the leaves are thicker than the ordinary varieties. | If picked young they are just as good as any other variety. | From memory I believe that it was grown chiefly as it was the best variety | for freezing. | | That's the stuff. The friend who gave it to us said that it cooks down to | give more bulk than normal spinach - if that sentence makes any sense! It does and it does. Regards, Nick Maclaren. |
#7
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Sacha wrote or quoted:
We've been given a dustbin liner filled with this. The giver suggested we make soup from it but what I want to know from anyone who grows this, is, do we use the stalks, some part of the stalk, discard all of the stalks? Stalks are usually second rate plant material in my book. I even rip veins out of leaves - to give myself proportionally more green leafy matter. However, as stalks go, NZ spinach stalks are pretty innocuous. I eat my NZ spinach in salads. If you are processing it, the stalk issue is likely to be even less relevant. -- __________ |im |yler http://timtyler.org/ Remove lock to reply. |
#8
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On Fri, 10 Sep 2004 00:30:15 +0100, Sacha
wrote: We've been given a dustbin liner filled with this. The giver suggested we make soup from it but what I want to know from anyone who grows this, is, do we use the stalks, some part of the stalk, discard all of the stalks? Anyone know? My chief recollection of it, apart from it's propensity to cover ground at a rate of knots is that it's a real bore to pick. The leaves are quite small so if you're feeding any number of people it takes forever to pick. ================================================= Rod Weed my email address to reply. http://website.lineone.net/~rodcraddock/index.html |
#9
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g'day sacha,
i pick the young growing tips and down to about the 4th leaf, and cook and eat all of that. if i pick any further down i usually don't bother with the stem just the leaves. they can be used in salads as well. len snipped -- happy gardening 'it works for me it could work for you,' "in the end ya' gotta do what ya' gotta do" but consider others and the environment http://members.optusnet.com.au/~gardenlen1/ my e/mail addies have spam filters you should know what to delete before you send. |
#11
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On 10/9/04 19:56, in article ,
"len gardener" wrote: g'day sacha, i pick the young growing tips and down to about the 4th leaf, and cook and eat all of that. if i pick any further down i usually don't bother with the stem just the leaves. they can be used in salads as well. Thanks, Len. We could always see what our tea room customers think of that. ;-) -- Sacha www.hillhousenursery.co.uk South Devon (remove the weeds to email me) |
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