lydamorehouse: (Default)
[personal profile] lydamorehouse
 ...I totally thought this was a new vegetable. Turns out it's just a different variety of bok choy.

a much cuter version of bok choy
Image: a much WHITER, more kale like bok choy... still bok choy, though, folks.  I had no idea.

I haven't talked much about my fall CSA. First of all, I figured y'all were probably sick of me bragging about the amazing produce I was getting, and also there really hasn't been anything unusual or terribly interesting. We had a surfeit of habanero peppers, all of which I gave away to a little free pantry.  Likewise, we had too many hot Thai bird pepper, some of which I still have (though I did add one to the the Thai eggplant dish I made before and that was actually a yummy addition.) But, like, we have a bucket of them... and we just don't pepper that much.  But, otherwise it's been butternut squash and green beans and the sorts of things you'd expect in a fall share.

Then came this today. They listed it as pok choi, but that was just a fooly, because pok choi is just British for bok choy. They are the same vegetable. This one is just called white bok choi, and the one I see in the supermarket more regularly is the Shanghai bok choi.  I am excited to tell you that I can accidentally read the Chinese for this: 小白菜 because it's the same in Japanese Kanji: Small White Vegetable.  Ironically, in Japanese, the Kanji is different, as it the word: chingensai.

I have not attempted to taste it yet, but will report as to whether or not the white variety tastes significantly different from the Shanghai variety. I suspect it won't.  The trick will be convincing my wife that this is, indeed, the same vegetable she has grown to enjoy.

Date: 2020-10-15 09:17 pm (UTC)
inkstone: small blue flowers resting on a wooden board (Default)
From: [personal profile] inkstone
I alternate between this and Shanghai cabbage pretty regularly. (It depends on which one's on sale at the Asian grocery.) They're pretty similar in flavor. This variety might be more crisp?

Date: 2020-10-17 08:32 pm (UTC)
inkstone: small blue flowers resting on a wooden board (Default)
From: [personal profile] inkstone
It's funny because I've always known this as bok choy. Well, baby bok choy because I grew up with full-sized bok choy (about the size of untrimmed celery?). I was very excited when I saw that this and Shanghai cabbage (which I didn't really start seeing until my 20s) came in the smaller, easier to use sizes.
Edited Date: 2020-10-17 08:33 pm (UTC)

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