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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Can I use bok choy instead? Any other suggestions. That S. C. thread
got me looking, but none in my market. |
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On Jan 19, 8:32*am, wrote:
> Can I use bok choy instead? *Any other suggestions. *That S. C. thread > got me looking, but none in my market. If you're asking what other greens are good and easy, try beet greens if you can find them. Steam or stirfry. If your market only sells beetroots, try a farmers market this spring/summer. -aem |
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On Jan 19, 2:25*pm, aem > wrote:
> If you're asking what other greens are good and easy, try beet greens I should have said 'similar in taste'. |
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On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 13:13:04 -0800 (PST),
wrote: >On Jan 19, 2:25*pm, aem > wrote: > >> If you're asking what other greens are good and easy, try beet greens > >I should have said 'similar in taste'. Well, Swiss chard is Beta vulgaris, or silverbeet. It has a beet-like flavor, so substituting silver- beet leaves seems to make sense. take a look at: http://www.foodsubs.com/Greenckg.html Alex |
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On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 15:20:30 -0600, "modom (palindrome guy)"
> wrote: >On Mon, 19 Jan 2009 08:32:02 -0800 (PST), >wrote: > >>Can I use bok choy instead? Any other suggestions. That S. C. thread >>got me looking, but none in my market. > >How about kale? I think not. Kale is a cole crop. I sub it for collards. Works well in any dish that calls for cabbage as an ingredient. FE: Gyuvec is often made with cabbage, but you cacn sub kale, collards, brocolli, cauliflower or kohlrabi with no worries. OF course, if she can't get beet tops, all bets are off.... Alex |
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On Jan 20, 3:26 pm, Omelet > wrote:
> In article > >, > > wrote: > > On Jan 19, 2:25 pm, aem <aem > wrote: > > > > If you're asking what other greens are good and easy, try beet greens > > > I should have said 'similar in taste'. > > aem is correct. Beet greens (to me at least) are more similar in flavor > to chard than spinach is. > -- > Peace! Om > > "Any ship can be a minesweeper. Once." -- Anonymous All those big leafs are similar, but different. It will still be good dish, but not the same. If you want the exact taste, use the exact recipe. Or, play. You might find a vegetable you like better. I got something at the farmers' mkt this summer that the guy called "Chineese Broccoli". Not broccoli - huge, beautiful, magenta leaves. Kept it in a vase for a day, it was so pretty, but it started to wilt, so I've got a couple of bags still in the freezer. I throw it in soup, stir fry, steam like spinach. It's a big dark leaf that tastes good. Got to find seeds for this spring - not the backyard garden, the front porch - this stuff is prettier than a lot of flowers. bulka |
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