hoodat
Garden Addicted
Unless you are of Mexican heritage you probably never heard of epizote. It's a weedy looking plant. In fact it greatly resembles ragweed. If you smell a crushed leaf or taste it you would never think of cooking with it. It smells kind of like kerosene and tastes sort of like turpentine, but don't worry. That is a volatile oil and disapears at the first sign of cooking. Mexicans usually add it to any dry beans they cook as it has an enzyme that helps you digest the beans and takes all the "blow" out of them. Kind of Natures version of Beano. It adds little or no flavor of its own but brings the best flavor out in the beans. I just toss in a big sprig of it toward the end of cooking, then fish it back out before I serve.
It does have one unfortunate feature. It seeds freely so once you plant the first ones you find it popping up in all sorts of places.
It's very easy going. Sun or open shade. Good soil or poor soil. It will withstand drought but does better with regular watering. It's also a good magnesium indicator. If the leaves get purple splotches or edges your soil needs more of that mineral.
If you live in the Southwest you have probably "inherited" some already from your Mexican neighbors and didn't know what it was. I wouldn't be without it. This is what it looks like:
It does have one unfortunate feature. It seeds freely so once you plant the first ones you find it popping up in all sorts of places.
It's very easy going. Sun or open shade. Good soil or poor soil. It will withstand drought but does better with regular watering. It's also a good magnesium indicator. If the leaves get purple splotches or edges your soil needs more of that mineral.
If you live in the Southwest you have probably "inherited" some already from your Mexican neighbors and didn't know what it was. I wouldn't be without it. This is what it looks like:

