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As I'm 'snowed under' with this white menace at the moment , perhaps I should use it as a substitute in French Onion Soup' and feed the poor ?
Bill: Good idea:...l do you know how/where to modify/edit the subject and changed it to "October 2010 in the Southern Hemisphere"Otherwise we might need our beloved Maggi to do it for us Grin Grin Thanks.
A cycad, yes Mark, we have a few native species and in general they are hardy and tough as old boots, especially the south Island species. Likewise the Cordyline (australis) aka cabbage tree. It will take any snow or rost that our climate can provide. We have so many of them around that we take them for granted. There are thousands of the Corrdyline growing on the hills near me, with kowhai, Sophora tetraptera.
The pictures of Allium triquetrum is so beautiful, but I can see that there is a little too much vigor in them. I bought a bag of Allium triquetrum, two years ago. None of them survived the winter.Different climate, different conditions.Ulla
Quote from: Otto Fauser on October 04, 2010, 12:55:23 PMAs I'm 'snowed under' with this white menace at the moment , perhaps I should use it as a substitute in French Onion Soup' and feed the poor ?Otto: It's nowadays more likely gourmet food for the educated rich/middle classes than the poor with the back to nature/ slow food movements. Has been traditionally used as a wild foraged onion in some Mediterranean countries (Italy, Albania etc). It has a mild garlic flavour and the flowers also make an attractive and tasty addition to spring salads. Here's a picture with sign from Orto Botanico in Firenze, Italy in early April explaining how it's used in cooking:
Otto: It's nowadays more likely gourmet food for the rich/middle classes than the poor with the back to nature/ slow food movements. Has been traditionally used as a wild foraged onion in some Mediterranean countries (Italy, Albania etc). It has a mild garlic flavour and the flowers also make an attractive and tasty addition to spring salads. Here's a picture with sign from Orto Botanico in Firenze, Italy in early April explaining how it's used in cooking:
It's far easier just putting a hat on, Bill, I do it all the time!
Bill, your pictures of Allium triquertum make me shudder. It is invasive here as well and seems unstoppable once it gets going. I have a small infestation which I carefully dig out each year as it appears but I have not succeeded in getting rid of it. I think a proportion of the bulbs remain dormant and do not sprout and evade the annual weeding.