I’m on a kick this year of Swiss chard. In my opinion it seems like the perfect cooking green. Never had it before this year. This is essentially a chicken soup with Swiss chard replacing the noodles.

I have both the rainbow color variety and the green giant fordhook. Fordhook has appeared to be the most robust so will likely use that exclusively next year.

I grew it in my garden this year and it’s been very easy to take care off, bullet proof. And really easy to cook as a side in butter/ olive oil.

It is very mild, takes on flavor of whatever it is cooked with and seasoned, nice texture seems hard to over cook.

#foodstr #gardening #swisschard

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Chard use to be my go to cooking green, still like them, but collards the last few years have replaced them.

Tree collards or standard? Do you just prefer their flavors or something else?

The variety I like the best is called yellow cabbage collard. I can plant in the spring it gets huge leaves they stay tender and are sweet for a brassica even in the summer, don’t bolt and last through my winters. Chard doesn’t die in our winters but gets rots with all the rain.

I’m growing a lot this year myself. My wife made a raw salad with it and it’s pretty damn good. I’ll see if I can get a recipe for you.

Thanks

I haven’t tried fresh really other than ripping of a piece to taste now and then when I am out there.