digitS'
Garden Master
They can be so very useful.
Here's a LINK for identification purposes.
I fairly sure that I once posted a link to University of Melbourne webpages devoted to identification but the Australian government now seem to have that info, complete with pictures. Australia guides our way! It's useful because the names can be confusing. The Latin names help, I mean when there are a half dozen names and spellings in English ... But also, Japanese is not likely to have the same name as Korean, Mandarin, Thai etc. And, not only might you be interested in Japanese cuisine but you might find Thai (or Taiwan) vegetable seeds in an Asian market. That sorta thing
.
Since it's an English glossary, it starts off with A and the first is amaranth, with a picture of a variety I will be growing in 2018. The one shown is the most popular but I started with with another, 2 years ago. Too small! Then I tried a white amaranth last year, a little bigger plant but still small. Any would be useful for salads.
Useful but I'm not in entire agreement with the Aussies on all of it. Choy sum is an ingredient, as best as I understand from once reading an online article. It appears to me that I cannot buy the larger type in the US. That's frustrating. (It's sounding like I'm a giant veggie grower! No, but tiny and delicate become difficult to handle and I go for simplicity
.) Anyway, I have one from saved seed that I have to mess with every few years. Where did it come from? I think it was on a rack at a Thai food store, 20 years ago.
"Japanese pumpkin?" A C. maxima squash is a C. maxima squash. Tweak a buttercup and you get a kabocha. I'm not saying that there aren't improvements as a result and I'm a great admirer of Japanese plant breeders - we all should be! But, C. maxima was in South America first and "pumpkin" isn't a very clear definition but it could be better used, if we don't use the term for half the squash and gourds on Earth!
I see that @HmooseK is growing Senposai and Komatsuna ..! Yay! I found that both were good choices in my garden. Nothing out of the garden for a stir-fry is as early & quick as komatsuna. It's very similar to bok choy and just as useful. Senposai has mostly been replaced by Portuguese kale in my garden. I'm having to dig in my heals so that collards don't replace both if DW has her way!
Any Way, East meets West - Asia! Australia! America! Eh?
Steve
Here's a LINK for identification purposes.
I fairly sure that I once posted a link to University of Melbourne webpages devoted to identification but the Australian government now seem to have that info, complete with pictures. Australia guides our way! It's useful because the names can be confusing. The Latin names help, I mean when there are a half dozen names and spellings in English ... But also, Japanese is not likely to have the same name as Korean, Mandarin, Thai etc. And, not only might you be interested in Japanese cuisine but you might find Thai (or Taiwan) vegetable seeds in an Asian market. That sorta thing
Since it's an English glossary, it starts off with A and the first is amaranth, with a picture of a variety I will be growing in 2018. The one shown is the most popular but I started with with another, 2 years ago. Too small! Then I tried a white amaranth last year, a little bigger plant but still small. Any would be useful for salads.
Useful but I'm not in entire agreement with the Aussies on all of it. Choy sum is an ingredient, as best as I understand from once reading an online article. It appears to me that I cannot buy the larger type in the US. That's frustrating. (It's sounding like I'm a giant veggie grower! No, but tiny and delicate become difficult to handle and I go for simplicity
"Japanese pumpkin?" A C. maxima squash is a C. maxima squash. Tweak a buttercup and you get a kabocha. I'm not saying that there aren't improvements as a result and I'm a great admirer of Japanese plant breeders - we all should be! But, C. maxima was in South America first and "pumpkin" isn't a very clear definition but it could be better used, if we don't use the term for half the squash and gourds on Earth!
I see that @HmooseK is growing Senposai and Komatsuna ..! Yay! I found that both were good choices in my garden. Nothing out of the garden for a stir-fry is as early & quick as komatsuna. It's very similar to bok choy and just as useful. Senposai has mostly been replaced by Portuguese kale in my garden. I'm having to dig in my heals so that collards don't replace both if DW has her way!
Any Way, East meets West - Asia! Australia! America! Eh?
Steve