Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Go Unlimited with Magzter GOLD

Get unlimited access to 10,000+ magazines, newspapers and Premium stories for just

$149.99
 
$74.99/Year

Try GOLD - Free

Vote Greens

Good Organic Gardening

|

July - August 2020

Asian greens are mostly green but some, like garland chrysanthemum (or tong ho), aren’t originally from Asia

- Chloe Thomson

Vote Greens

In the mid-90s, as a teenager, I lived with my family in Beijing for 12 months. I still vividly remember wandering the fresh-food markets, eyes wide and senses overloaded with different sights and smells.

Stopping to stare at strange fruits and vegetables we’d never seen — let alone eaten — before, we’d wonder how on earth you cooked them and what they tasted like.

Nearly 30 years later, many of these seemingly strange and unusual vegetables grace the shelves of supermarkets and greengrocers in Australia. The range of Asian greens in particular has increased threefold and the wealth of Asian greens grown at home and in community gardens has expanded as well.

On a daily basis, one in three Australian homes consumes some sort of Asian green vegetable. I feel this is thanks to immigrants educating us on their flavours and uses plus the wider availability of seeds for commercial production and home gardening.

The term Asian greens encompasses a huge range of green leafy vegetables including the more commonly known bok choy, pak choy, mizuna (Japanese mustard), choy sum, Chinese cabbage or wombok and mustard greens. But it also includes the lesser-known edible chrysanthemum or tong ho, tatsoi, perilla, kai-lan (gai lan), kangkong, celtuce and Tokyo bekana.

MORE STORIES FROM Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

Glamour girls

EVERYONE LOVES A HARDWORKING ISA BROWN BUT GET A LOAD OF THESE CHIC CHICKENS AND FEATHERED FASHIONISTAS

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

FRIED VEG

IT’S POSSIBLE TO ENJOY A FRY-UP IN A DELICIOUSLY HEALTHY WAY BY TURNING TO SOME FRY-FRIENDLY PLANTS

time to read

4 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

BEYOND BIG RED

TOMATOES COME IN ALL SHAPES, SIZES AND COLOURS, SO NOW’S THE TIME TO EXPLORE THEIR INFINITE VARIETY

time to read

4 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

EVEN MORE TROPPO

ANOTHER SENSATIONAL SIX TO CONSIDER FOR YOUR GARDEN — OR YOUR FRUIT SALAD

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

LET'S STALK RHUBARB

JUST AS TOMATO IS A FRUIT USED AS A VEGETABLE, RHUBARB IS A VEGETABLE COMMONLY CONSUMED AS A DESSERT

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

FOOD OF THE GODS

THE FLESHY FRUIT OF THE FICUS WAS MUHAMMAD’S FAVOURITE AND BUDDHA FOUND ENLIGHTENMENT UNDER A FIG TREE

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

MAKING GOOD BETTER

THE IRREPRESSIBLE TV PRESENTER WRITES ABOUT HOW SHE, WITH HUSBAND ANTON AND DAUGHTER FRIDA, TURNED A STEEP HOBART BLOCK INTO A PRODUCTIVE GARDEN

time to read

7 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

True lily

MANY PLANTS ARE CALLED LILIES BUT IT’S THE MEMBERS OF THE GENUS LILIUM THAT ARE THE REAL DEAL

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

SALTY BUDS

THE CAPER BUSH PRODUCES TWO DISTINCT BUT EQUALLY DELICIOUS, TANGY MORSELS: CAPERS AND CAPERBERRIES

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.5

Good Organic Gardening

Good Organic Gardening

Ducks on duty

BUSY, VIGILANT, HARD ON GARDEN PESTS AND GENEROUS LAYERS — YOU’VE GOTTA LOVE A DUCK!

time to read

5 mins

Good Organic Gardening 12.4

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size