[Sca-cooks] Advice on a leafy green vegetable
Terry Decker
t.d.decker at att.net
Fri Aug 14 10:58:25 PDT 2009
Basella alba is primarily a tropical or sub-tropical plant, so I doubt it
would be occurring in Medieval or Renaissance Europe. If you want to be
truly historically accurate, you're probably stuck with Swiss chard,
otherwise, enjoy.
Bear
>
> At my farmer's market (which has a large proportion of Hmong farmers) I
> can get "Chinese spinach". I looked it up and apparently this is also
> known as Malabar spinach, Basella alba.
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basella_alba
>
> I can find Asian recipes for it without a problem. My question is, what
> can I do with it in medieval cooking? I cannot eat true spinach unless it
> is cooked to goo (like in palak paneer, for instance) so that whatever I
> am allergic to is destroyed. The problem this creates is that I can't have
> any of the lovely tarts or salads that contain spinach because they aren't
> cooked enough. So, can I use this as a spinach substitute or am I better
> off using Swiss chard instead?
>
> Many thanks,
>
> Margaret FitzWilliam
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