beet greens
Jill McQuown wrote:
(adding back the original question/attribution)
"P Haine" wrote in message
...
As I was about to cook up a mess of fresh beet greens when our neighbor
suggested they might contain oxalic acid -- the same chemical that makes
rhubarb leaves inedible. Does anyone know if this is true? Sheldon?
Peg
"Patscga" wrote in message
...
It was a diet staple during the Depression. I know; I was there. And I'm
still here!
Pat in Atlanta
The same neighbor of Peg's probably didn't know he/she could eat cooked
dandylion greens as a diet staple, which my father did quite extensively as
a kid growing up in the American Depression.
Jill
Purslane, a common garden weed with rosettes of fleshy stems and leaves,
makes an interesting addition to salads and stirfries. It is supposed to
be *very* nutritious. It just tastes green to me. :-)
Best regards,
Bob
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