Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
Horseradish
On 10/06/2014 15:20, Malcolm wrote:
In article , Spider writes On 09/06/2014 09:32, Martin wrote: On Sun, 08 Jun 2014 13:44:38 +0100, Spider wrote: On 08/06/2014 07:59, Peter James wrote: Spider wrote: On 07/06/2014 21:15, Janet wrote: Something we enjoy a lot with beef, beetroot etc. So, I acquired a small root, potted it up and it's growing away nicely. The question is; is it a rampageous spreader I would regret letting loose in the garden, or should it be held captive (perhaps in a large buried pot)? Janer Mmm .. great stuff! I doubt it will ever take over the world, despite its WMD status, but it is a tasty thug best confined to a large pot. I stopped growing it the day I lifted a root and grated it to make a sauce to accompany a roast joint of beef. Never, ever again. It makes onions benign in comparison. People who grow this stuff should be reported as an environmental hazard! Peter LOL! You forgot the eye protection, did you?! It's good for clearing out the sinus, though ;~). but not to be sniffed at. Wimpish Germans put salt on horse radish, this decreases the fiery effect. I never knew that! I put salt on most (savoury) things, so I'm now wondering if that makes me a wimp ...? No, it merely lowers your life expectancy! And means I'll never have to share my meal with a slug :~). It is low salt, so I've got a slightly higher lower life expectancy. -- Spider. On high ground in SE London gardening on heavy clay |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Horseradish Tree | Texas | |||
Horseradish again | United Kingdom | |||
Help, re horseradish | United Kingdom | |||
Horseradish growing | United Kingdom | |||
Horseradish... | United Kingdom |