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- Swiss Chard - Bright Lights
Swiss Chard - Bright Lights
SKU:
SW34200A
CA$3.90
CA$3.90
Unavailable
per item
Approximately 100 seeds per gram.
Beta vulgaris
Lot# SW34200
Bright Lights Swiss Chard produces in a wide assortment of colors. It is stunning to see the stems in gold, pink and crimson. A few plants will be white and pink striped, orange, scarlet, purple, green and white. All are delicious to eat, though they are at their best harvested young for salads. The flavor is milder than ordinary chard, with each color a bit different. Swiss Chard is easy to grow and can be sown outdoors from mid-spring to mid-summer. Pick from late spring to summer and eat it like spinach or beet greens. It grows best in full sun but it will tolerate light shade. Remember to blanch the bigger leaves in a pot of boiling water with one tablespoon of salt for 5-10 minutes; then drain. This virtually eliminates any of the bitter flavor you sometimes get in older leaves. Young leaves we use fresh in salads or veggie wraps.
Beta vulgaris
Lot# SW34200
Bright Lights Swiss Chard produces in a wide assortment of colors. It is stunning to see the stems in gold, pink and crimson. A few plants will be white and pink striped, orange, scarlet, purple, green and white. All are delicious to eat, though they are at their best harvested young for salads. The flavor is milder than ordinary chard, with each color a bit different. Swiss Chard is easy to grow and can be sown outdoors from mid-spring to mid-summer. Pick from late spring to summer and eat it like spinach or beet greens. It grows best in full sun but it will tolerate light shade. Remember to blanch the bigger leaves in a pot of boiling water with one tablespoon of salt for 5-10 minutes; then drain. This virtually eliminates any of the bitter flavor you sometimes get in older leaves. Young leaves we use fresh in salads or veggie wraps.
Planting Instructions:
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Additional Information
Open pollinated-untreated seeds. Swiss chard is a vegetable that is in the same family as the common beet. However while the root of the beet is commonly eaten, it's the leaves of the Swiss chard that are consumed. Recent nutritional analysis has shown that Swiss chard is second only to spinach on the world's healthiest vegetable list. Packed with anthocyanins and fiber it's one of the most antioxidant rich foods as demonstrated in the vivid colors of the leaves. You can begin harvesting outer leaves anytime they are large enough to eat; young tender leaves are the most flavorful and make a colorful addition to salads. Cut out the midrib of larger leaves before cooking or chopping into salads. Chop large leaves to cook down like spinach, or use in casseroles, soups, and pasta. |