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We Indians have been eating this plant by adding potatoes 🥔 in it for cooking from ages, this weed grows normally in potatoes field 😋 it is know as *Kulpha*
@@GutenGardening take 1lb of this weed chopped roughly (wash before chop) 1 whole onion roughly chopped 6 cloves of garlic sliced slightly thick 2 tsp olive oil 1 green chili finely chopped (optional) Salt to taste Heat oil to high add onion cook for 2 minutes add the chopped garlic and chilli cook another 2 minutes then add the weeds and cook in high heat for another 5-7 minutes add salt. We eat it with white steam rice as a side and sometimes we add peeled shrimp
I had an cyst that was super painful on my back, messed around for 2 WEEKS trying to heal it….mashed some Purslane and applied it, no lie the next morning it was completely flat. Talk about amazed!!! 💯
Thanks, so many of the natural wild plants have what I call all the "anti's" antibacterial, antiviral, anti fungal, anti-inflammatory. Evidently this is too
I had a large planter like yours with soil and compost in it, which I intended to plant something in. One day I went out and saw that God had decided I needed a big lovely patch of purslane. Father knows best.
I spend hours removing this from my plant beds. I had no idea it's edible & healthy. Time to change my habits & save time as well. Thanks for this info!
Ha, we had ducklings for a few weeks this spring and filled a little plastic pool for them to swim in. We'd then dump the water out onto our paver patio. Sadly, when the water went into the cracks, there was some fairly extensive duck poop and associated nutrients that went in also. For the first time ever, we've got purslane growing where the waste water went. Also a ton of little volunteer tomatoe plants. Amazing.
You will be surprised how good it is if you cook it right. If you know how to cook collard greens cook this the same way put some smoked pork ham hocks or something so good.
In my country we cook purslane as salad. Boil it not long, add salt, garlic and oil to your taste. Some add vinegar too. You can cook it an keep in fridge a couple of weeks. Very healthy,tasty food. Good for digestion,etc. Nice with fried chicken, potatoes, pork; goes well as a salad. More soft before it starts blooming. 🕯️🇬🇪 Georgia, Tbilisi ❤
Thank you for sharing your recipe for purslane salad from Georgia! It's great to know that it's a versatile ingredient that pairs well with fried chicken, potatoes, and pork.
Hey.. do you know if you can eat the more cultivated types of purslane.. I found some at my local greenhouse this spring. They came as either orange & white or pink & white flowers.. Very pretty.. 😊 I figured as I haven't had much luck growing beautiful fuchsias, I would try these the purslane instead.. they are doing quite well..😊
I remember as a kid someone called the principal on me for trying to eat this exact plant. I got a detention and was told not to pick up random plants and eat them. She told me these were poisonous and I never touched it again. Thanks public education, did me wonders.
Lol we the people need to educate ourselves more on these things. She failed you. Like he was explaining spurge or milkweed is purslane's poisonous lookalike and I found them growing together as I was pulling purslane. The milkweed was bleeding milk right away when I broke the stem. Glad I noticed or they would've been mixed in.
I have this growing abundantly in my flower bed and I leave it to grow large to act as a ground cover because I like the way it looks. Knowing that I can eat it and it has high nutritional value makes me like it even more. Thanks for the info!
I have a lot of this under my tomato plants & around strawberry plants. I had heard that it was edible, but wasn't sure about it. I do like how it acts as a ground cover so I haven't tried to eliminate it, just reduce it somewhat. Salad for supper tonight, so I will go out and collect some purslane to give it a go. Thanks.
Nutrient rich is actually an understatement for purslane. It is a super food! It is portrayed as King's foil or pig's weed in Lord of the Rings. From there you know it increases rate of wound healing, neutralizes poisons etc... It is a potent medicinal herb!
From my understanding Purslane was sold decades ago as a common vegetable in markets. It was common in the Midwest during the depression era years. What brought me here was it grows in my back yard as like a sort of spider like crawling weed in the back with distinct purple stem and bulbous flat mushy stubby leaves.
That is a really interesting historical point. I can imagine that, at that time in particular, there was a lot of trial and error to see which additional plants would be edible and grow readily. Thank you for sharing.
Here in Southern California, it is still sold in some supermarkets that cater to the Latino community. However, the price is kind of high for such small bunches of bruised herbs. Fortunately, it grows wildly in my backyard and despite the neglect it looks a lot fresher and colorful than the commercially grown one. In Mexico it is cooked in a simple and delicious way, just sauteed with tomato, onion, garlic and some green chili (i.e. serranos). BTW, the preferred variety of grown purslane here is a green cultivar. The flavor is similar, but the purple one looks better, and it could possibly have more antioxidants.
We live in a rural area of Arizona- we have to haul our water, I mention this only to point out the fact that we seriously conserve water: it’s all dirt & rocks here. But yes, the mighty purslane weed/plant still continues to “pop up” all on its own. Thank you for pointing out the health benefits of this amazing power-house! ❤
It’s in Ohio. I never knew what it was. I let it grow freely in my front yard this year. It’s crazy everywhere. But I live in an old dry river bottom. All sand & rock.
I lived in the desert and it grew there without issue wherever I watered. I moved to the mountains (6840 feet) and it grows here too even with over three feet of snow on the ground during the winter, it still came up in the late spring!
I've been eating this plant for years. But it also makes a fabulous farm animal fodder, my chickens and ducks absolutely love it, pigs, goats and sheep. It's an excellent cut-and-come-again plant I pull up all of the side shoots in one hand and cut about an inch and a half from the base so it can regrow. You can dig it up and Transplant it anywhere you'd like. Free food for us and our animals!
I made is sauteed with avacado oil, onion, garlic, crushed red pepper and topped with lemon juice and parmesan cheese. Add a few pistachio nuts on top.
I found purslane (little hogweed, verdolagas) and spurge (milkweed) growing amongst each other in the same spot. I would've been confused but when i started pulling i noticed a milky substance coming out of some stems and i had already learned about milkweed being poisonous. The milkweed had tiny white flowers growing on it. The purslane had no flowers at this point but i have seen yellow flowers on it before. Now i know the difference.
I think its a case of different plants being called the same thing. Additional folk names include wart spurge, summer spurge, umbrella milkweed, and wolf's-milk.@@PureU0Artificial
I am sure the chickens love it, and we haven't tried dehyrdating it before, but that sounds like a great idea. Yeah, the spurge is a no go. I see a whole bunch of spurge growing nearby at a local grocery store. It definitely has some clear similarities.
@@Fix-It-Jeff you can use as detox concoction. It helps deep clean all the veins and arteries. There are other herbs you'll need to add in rain water with 250 grams of these purslane. In 2.5 litres of water and 6 other herbs plus almonds and pumpkin seeds. Total ten items. You'll need to boil it on very very low heat, until the liquid reduces to 1 litre. Let it cool down and steep over night or 16 hours then sieve it and fill the air tight bottle. Once it's all ready you'll need to take this concoction 25 mls to 75 mls honey 🍯🍯. Mix it to resemble as a syrup. Always Store in fridge. Note It has to be stored in the fridge all the time until when you are ready to use take it out mix it vigorously then have I teaspoon full and drink a glass of water last thing in the night. Collect the first urine when you get up leave for a while and you'll see all the toxins have settled at the bottom of the jar. It's amazing results you can watch the testimonial on media if you wish. It's on all the platforms. Good luck. 🙏🤞👍🙌🙌🙌🙌
Purslane grows in soil that other plants will not grow in. I make soup out of it and my kids love it. A red onion, some salt, tomato, and put it all in some broth and it tastes great!
Just heard about how we can eat Purslane a few months ago and now I'm cultivating it instead of giving it to the chickens. I really like the taste and the crunch.
Purslane showed up last year in my fairly new raised beds. She volunteered from somewhere! Maybe the birds, maybe the mulch or compost but there she was! I was so excited as, somehow I recognized it as purslane from earlier herb studies. So I checked online, just to be sure and began harvesting to eat. Yummy! Now it self-seeds and is back again this year! I leave her alone and although we’ve had drought here for several weeks, she’s come back after a rain and I harvested some. Plan to keep it as a ground cover and edible super-food!
In my area, it's known as 'Mexican lettuce' because it can be eaten raw or cooked. This plant can be a noxious weed if it isn't culled/thinned/harvested frequently. Be sure you want it before you plant it or you might be sorry when it takes over your garden. It actually makes a fairly attractive ground cover with its shiny green leaves and bright yellow flowers...
'Mexican lettuce,' a versatile plant with many names, indeed! Embrace its versatility while staying vigilant in your garden. Happy gardening! Thanks for sharing.
I let mine go wild last year in between all of my food plants. The whole garden looked gorgeous with these lovely green low mats surrounding each plant and the purslane blocked out all other weeds. It was easy to pull up the ones who wanted to crowd the big plants… those went to the salad bowl!
It's a common weed in Africa (North East of Namibia) and we take it as vegetable we've been eating those days as well. Now it is like disappearing this years. In my vernacular language in Namibia we called Purslane, "Dihenya." in mbukushu language. That other weed you showed us which look similar to purslane, do grow here too but we don't eat that one now.
Purslane is a neat plant, both in its use and the succulent way it grows. It is certainly one of the nicer "weeds" in the garden and usually grows fairly nicely alongside the veggies etc. Thank you for the shout out as well that was really nice of you and we really appreciate it! The purslane relish video was one of our older videos but it is a really nice recipe and worth trying!
It is really cool, and we enjoy the taste, though I also know they can overwhelm pretty quickly. You are welcome for the shoutout. Any time we can reference something we have learned from other channels, we will do our best to do so. :) Have a wonderful evening!
mom always made Chuleta de Puerco con Verdolagas / pork chop with purslane (onions 'n tomatoes added) i actually pick them wherever i find it and plant it in my garden and eat 😋
I love purselane and mixed in a salad of other greens it is delicious! I do recommend giving it its own raised bed area so it doesn’t overrun other vegetables. Nice channel by the way. You now have a new subscriber 😊
my mom started using Purslane last year because someone told her about how good it tastes in rice and its benefits. It is such an easy plant to grow, and it looks beautiful, especially with its yellow flowers. Recently, I noticed a weed popped up in another pot that looked similar to the Purslane, but the leaves are wider. So I've been watching it trying to figure out why that one looked so different, I started thinking maybe it was a weed of the same family of Purslane. Now I know that must be the Spurge. Thank you for making this video, :) 👍 it's very informative.
Thanks for sharing your experience! While we can't confirm the identification without more information, it's great that you're observing the differences. It's always good to exercise caution and further investigate. We appreciate your feedback and engagement with the video!
I was trying to pull this purslane from my community garden and a fellow gardener who is Asian and doesn't speak English or French dropped by and started scolding me with hand gestures. She asked if she could have some and I pratically gave it all to her. If I understood correctly, she uses it in stir-fries.
That is so interesting. Different cultures have different cuisines, and so, similar to huitlacoche, we react differently to the various plants in our space. This one is definitely delicious.
Purslane and chickweed taste a little better than grass, but are full of nutrients. Curly doc, poke salet picked young, wild lettuce, viola and violet leaves, and lambs quarters are also edible as well as wild chives. Lambs quarter is as good as spinach. Wild mustard, and stinging nettle are good. Stinging nettle is my favorite greens. There is nothing out there, commercially produced or wild, that tastes better than stinging nettle.
Note about purslane how it tastes s also determined on the time of the day you harvest it. If you harvest it early in the morning, it has a nice, mild flavor. Pick it later in the day and it will be somewhat bitter.
Love Purslane or verdolagas (Spanish). Went to have Chinese with some friends and my husband spied this beautiful growth on their lawn. We put it in a box, brought it home, and I cooked it next day. It was SO delicious. Now every time we go over there, Lou looks their lawn over. Yum
My mother used to cook it with lentils and shredded coconut as a side dish curry Added to rice and clarified butter it is absolutely delicious They sell these in vegetable market sometimes When I see it in my garden I pluck it but my gardener keeps pulling it out
Purslane Portulaca oleracea (common purslane, also known as verdolaga, pigweed, little hogweed, red root, pursley) is an annual succulent in the family Portulacaceae This plant possesses mucilaginous substances which are of medicinal importance. It is a rich source of potassium (494 mg/100 g) followed by magnesium (68 mg/100 g) and calcium (65 mg/100 g) and possesses the potential to be used as vegetable source of omega-3 fatty acid.
In Mexico it’s called Verdolaga, and it’s eaten cooked or raw. My favorite is cooked with pork and a green tomatillo sauce. Now we can find it at our local grocery store or pick your own farm in a nearby town.
It has a fruit called Pyxidium ,a cup like thing with a tiny lid as and when it matures enough the lid automatically falls of dispersing very tiny black seeds ,when we clean Purslane with water for cooking,the black seeds settle down,if u throw this water in a pot they will germinate!!
Its a nice accent in a salad, but difficult to eat on it's own between the sliminess and the astringency. I planted a bunch of selected green purslane seeds around my gardens and yard 5+ years ago, and I think it has naturalized now. Its endemic to the area, but I think the plants in our yard are hardier and more succulent than the stuff growing up from the sidewalk.
I have it all over my yard both front and back. Based on the information in this video I will try it. Actually I will have to wait until spring/summer of 2023 as it has gotten to cold in southern New Jersey to grow outdoors in our area. I am eager to try it.
Here's a fun fact: portulaca (aka moss rose) will reseed as a purslane. At least mine always did. I'd get one year from what I planted, the next year I'd get some reseeding of portulaca, but mostly what I'd get is a garden full of purslane. And yes, I ate it.
I was looking for moss rose at the garden center today and they were sold out. They showed me the purslane they were selling. But I'm thinking 🤔 is it spurge? and is it edible? Doesn't look like the purslane I've seen previously.
@@goccogrrl moss rose is a low growing flower I can't seem to grow from seed. Purslane is a common weed I can't seem to find now that I want to taste it. Other than that, I'm trying to figure that out myself.
Hey there I live in New Orleans and I find that I often see spurge growing almost entangled with purslane. And you can tell the difference between the two when you feel the leaves like you said the purslane has a meteor feel thicker like you said more succulent as where the spurge has just a flat leaf field. Thank you for your video on this I am trying to spread the good news about purslane to people and I grow it myself! God bless everyone who reads this
I did not know it's etable, I have it growing in my yard and have always protected it and thanks God now I know what it's loaded with. I'm definitely going to let my friends know about it and share beyond. Thank you UA-cam, I just love you for so much knowledge. Wow wow beautiful ❤❤
You should try it Pickler, it is delicious, aboid the real thick stems they can make it a bit slimy, collect the young stems and leaves, simmer some white rice vinegar or apple cider vinegar with some salt and pepper corns some mustard seeds and some hot pepper flakes, put in glass jar cover till top close and refrigerate fir 2 days, delicious with rice recipes 😊
Nowadays I've stopped to plant cabbages on my tiny farm 😊 I just go out and select from the tenth of amazing seasonal herbs that spontaneously grow everywhere!! 😄 ♥️ 💕 ❤️ 🌿🌿🌱🌱 All I have to do is to be careful not to step on my food!! It's even more amazing because as much as I use the more they grow! And the more they grow and occupy the land the more some very dangerous herbs (for the cats and dogs) disappear!!! The amount of great benefits to our health these primordial foods gives us is no match for cabbages and other modified vegetables. Also saves us a lot of money! They are soo good and delicious 😋 💕❤️ This year I've finally got a MORINGA and a ORA PRO NOBIS 😍💝
This is one of my favorite wild edibles. I like to saute It until it's chronchy . It reminds me of baked pumpkin seeds without the pulp .👌 Great video. You have a new subscriber.
I love these, after cleaning and boiling it I fry it up with peppers onion and tomatoes and some smoked pork so so freaking good👍🏻 u find it everywhere here in Florida specially in strawberry fields. I love colored greens but honestly I believe these are better!
I love purslane! Living in Turkey, you can not only buy it in the farmers markets but the supermarket produce section. And...restaurants! Thanks for sharing and helping others to eat their weeds!!
That's wonderful to hear! Purslane is indeed a versatile and nutritious plant, and it's great that it's easily available in Turkey. It's fantastic to see people embracing the idea of incorporating "weeds" into their meals. Thank you for your support!
Thank you for bringing up oxalates. When you said that it was very like spinach, I instantly wondered if I could eat it. I can’t eat spinach, beets, rhubarb, etc because I’ve had many kidney stones. It’s sad for me because I bought wild purslane seeds.
Traditional Chinese medicine has excellent remedies for kidney stones. Try camomile tea, too. I used to give it to my tomcat for his bladder stones. He never got them as long as he was getting a dose of camomile tea in his water!
@@jswhosoever4533 Yep. More like PAIN!!!!!!!!! A urine crystal is all jagged, like a ball of points. Believe me, when you get one, you will KNOW ALL ABOUT IT.
It's in my fridge, for the 1st time, right now. My garden is over-run with it. I've eaten bits as I've gardened & am working up the courage to brown some garlic & eat it together. (I don't have many potential ingredients handy & not many recipes I've found sound appetizing.) Fingers crossed that I've got a new, nearly free food :)
If you're looking for more recipe inspiration, be sure to check out the comment section below. There might be some hidden gems shared by fellow gardeners and food enthusiasts. Don't be afraid to try new combinations and get creative in the kitchen. You might just discover a delicious and healthy new favorite!
@@GutenGardening Absolutely, my dude. Some comment sections are gold! Always happy to see a positive, helpful comment section. No joke: it gives me hope for the world wide community
I have a purslane garden with 4 different cultivars. I put them in salads and on sandwiches. They are pretty good. I've been growing Purslane for about 30 years. They always come back. I don't have to do anything with it.
This plant also has the peculiarity of coexisting C4 and CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism) photosynthetic pathways (which seems to be quite rare as plants tend to be C3, C4 or CAM but not combinations). The observation about the taste changing when well watered is likely because the CAM metabolism will switch on and become predominant under drought conditions. When purslane is depending mostly on the CAM pathway (that is, under dry conditions), you should also be able to tell the difference in how tart it tastes between picking it and tasting it in the morning and in the evening. This is because malic acid will accumulate during the night to a peak early morning and then it will be consumed by the tissues during the day to reach a low at the end of the day.
Malic acid or Oxalic acid? I know that purslane contains significant amounts of oxalic acid, which is known to cause kidney stones in susceptible people.
@@randybugger3006, mostly, I don't actually know. The relevant species when it comes to CAM would be malate. That does not mean P. oleracea does not also contain oxalate (which it does). I do not know if you'd see a similar fluctuation with oxalate. It looks like there's a pathway from malate to oxaloacetate to oxalate that could convert malate to oxalate so maybe it could also cycle with the malate? Whether it dominates or is a minor reaction (just because the pathway is there doesn't mean it is favored at any one time) , I couldn't tell you.
In Bangladesh, It's known as Gima Shak (গিমা শাক)। It's sometimes neglected, as it grows pretty much anywhere and it tastes bitter, but no one disputes it's medicinal properties, in such case, it is comparable to Neem (নীম). Another neglected, yet medicinally "praised" plant (Tree).
My neighbor ate spurge every spring for many years because he thought it was purslane, though he complained that it would give him a stomach ache in large quantities, but then he would just toss a beer down to fix it. If you have kidney issues, avoid Tylenol and similar meds. People have eaten oxalate-containing foods forever...
Thanks for sharing! It's crucial to correctly identify edible plants and be mindful of preexisting health conditions when trying new foods. Some foods contain oxalates, which can be problematic for people with kidney issues. It's a great reminder to be cautious and informed about our health.
I had this come up in "abandoned" flower pots and just left it because I liked the way it looked (instinct?) Now I intend to encourage its growth and munch on it. Thanks for the enlightenment!
This plant grows in my burn pile in rural Oregon, where I burn fallen branches and other woody waste in spring and fall (when the ground is WET at least 6" down). It keeps coming back, in spite of the intense heat of the bonfire, resulting ashes, and NO water. My llamas like to eat it in summer. Glad to know it isn't toxic!
When COVID-19 hit, and everyone was buying all the toilet paper. We ran out of toilet paper, and had no other choice. We started using the Purslane to wipe ourselves, and it actually healed me of my decades long hemorrhoids problem. Today, i stand - still using Purslane to wipe, everyday.
i know about it 2 years and collect it to prepare it like the small cucumbers in glasses. water, vinegar, portulak and spices. fill it in glasses and cover it with the other cooked ingredients. so you can use it during the winter too. it is very good and healthy. here in switzerland it grows in every natural place. you can make soup of it too. thank you for this informative video 🙏
I just started doing this too, spring I lay down wood chips and the Purslane of course isn't stopped and it grows nice and is tasty but the other weeds are less aggressive and have trouble through the chips. I'm still learning about this little plant that I recently discovered and its abundant by where I grow my Blueberries.
@@GutenGardening It was kinda bitter but just 2 days ago while weeding the Strawberry bed for winter prep I tried again. My thought process was things tend to get sweeter as the cool Autumn air rolls in. I wouldn't say it was sweet per say but was more eatable.
I leave this plant in my raised bed as a decorative plant, and it grows so vigorously I can chop and drop for easy mulch. Didn't know it was edible though
I know that purslane is edible, and has healthy benefits, I’ve seen it a lot, everyone says it has a lemony flavor, so, every time I saw it, I’d eat a few leaves, unfortunately, I taste no hint of lemon, it’s bland to me. But, reading the comments here, making pesto, adding to salads, cooking with food, I’ll start foraging it again, but as for cooking which I feel will take away nutrients from it, I’ll add after food is cooked. Thank u
I make tincture with it. Cut into smaller pieces (I use a pizza cutter), put in a mason jar, and cover with vodka. Let it steep in the refrigerator for a couple weeks, shake it up every day, strain, and bottle up in a dropper bottle. I do the same with dandelion. 1-2 ml per day 😃 I do love it fresh too!
We've got lots of this in our garden. We stir-fry or steam it. Tastes good. I love it. The stem can be a little sour, though, so I can't have it too often.
We grew up eating this plant and I love it. In Mexico it’s called verdolaga. We bring to light boil with garlic salt, and onion. Strain and fry some turkey then add it in with some beaten egg a little cumin and pepper. Add hot peppers to your taste and you’re good to go. For best taste harvest before it buds/blossoms.
Good video. I've never grown Purslane because it grows wild on my property. My fav way to eat this is raw in salads. I also make Purslane Quiche and that is delicious! I've also made a creamy dish using cheese and cream mixed in with Purslane. It's such a treat to have in warm weather!
good stuff, I've eaten it for decades. I eat leaves, flowers, seeds. stems are rather fibrous so I only eat young ones. Leaves are great sauteed, stir fried, in soups, salads and as 'walking snacks' when I want something while I wander.
Thank you for this video. I’ve been trying to find the answer to my question, but I’ve not found it yet. I purchased purslane last summer from Home Depot for the beauty of its colorful flowers. I just love them. I had no idea purslane could be edible until researching it. Of course I’m certain the pots I bought were grown with pesticides. These died back during the winter I thought I’d lost them for sure. But I got them back out in early April, pruned just a little, watered and have only fertilized once with miracle grow. They are slightly watered everyday and gorgeous! My question is, They’ve not been sprayed this year with any pesticides, would they be safe to put on a salad? Can the flowers be consumed and should they? Thank you very much!
We have it in our yard every where and I'm always snacking on it. I always find it very neutral tasting: doesn't have a whole lot of flavor but it can be sweeter (less bitter) when full of moisture. It's great. Thanks.
I've read that aboriginal people turn the seeds into flour. That would require a whole lot of seeds, but it is a pretty good idea if you have a large supply.
That is so interesting! I had never heard that before. Now I want to research that further. This stuff does grow everywhere, though, so I am not surprised.
I started Purslane in my garden this year. I`ve only seen it in sidewalk cracks here and never successfully transplanted it. So I bought seeds to learn how to grow it. The taste reminds me of spinach.
@@GutenGardening sure thing, I'm prepping the soil now, I love herbs, growing them, adding to soups, dry them, give as gifts, nutritious way to get vitamins. I ground seeds like fennel, flax,
Researched this plant before I listened to your advice, and you were right on about everything. It is a health plant, that everyone should grow. Research it for yourself to verify it helps in these areas' cancers, diabetes, anti-inflammatory, heart, and much more. Everyone should have and use this plant and they will go to the dr less often; because they will not have the problems.
very cool. First discovered it when I was buying preprepared boxes of organic veggies from a local organic biz. The lady was a bit crazy… one of them “totally raw” vegans😅. Haha not me! But a good biz and they put purslane in the box and I was all wtf is this?! So looked it up and was like ohhh ok. And that was several years ago and now every once in a while videos like yours here pops up into my feed and I enjoy them. Uhhhh… no offense if you are a vegan🙂lol that is totally fine just make sure you’re getting enough protein by other means. Me I try to be your traditional human omnivore like most humans all throughout the history of all mankind😅
Oh man, this is fantastic to know. I noticed my dog eating it out of the garden and I just thought it was a nuisance. It grows in everything no matter what I plant the next thing you know I got one of these things popping up with it. I also have something that looks like this, but it flowers, a fluorescent pink, orange, yellow Blooms on it and I have no idea what that is either.
@@GutenGardening I prefer to have it raw on top of a salad or pasta or a baked potato. I've also had it with seafood as it's lemony flavor pairs well. Purslane is still good cooked, but it loses some of the succulent crunch.
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Thanks for watching 👍👍
Have you seen this harvest: Magic Molly Purple Potatoes in Containers ua-cam.com/video/8qilYht6H2k/v-deo.html
Please, what was that other plant you were comparing to it ? I find those everywhere, are they a weed or good for you ? Thank You
Time of day, makes a difference in taste.
We Indians have been eating this plant by adding potatoes 🥔 in it for cooking from ages, this weed grows normally in potatoes field 😋 it is know as *Kulpha*
Amazing 😊 Good to know!🌿
#SaveSoil
How do you cook it
I read that some folks make soup out of it. I have only ever eaten this raw. I would love to know some good recipes though!
I make pesto with it. Dandelion greens and purslane with some holy basil. I also make pesto with chickweed in the spring with dandelion greens.
@@GutenGardening take
1lb of this weed chopped roughly (wash before chop)
1 whole onion roughly chopped
6 cloves of garlic sliced slightly thick
2 tsp olive oil
1 green chili finely chopped (optional)
Salt to taste
Heat oil to high add onion cook for 2 minutes add the chopped garlic and chilli cook another 2 minutes then add the weeds and cook in high heat for another 5-7 minutes add salt. We eat it with white steam rice as a side and sometimes we add peeled shrimp
It's prized in Lebanon, where it is eaten as a salad with onions and tomatoes.
That sounds so delicious!
@@GutenGardening And healthy! 👍
I had an cyst that was super painful on my back, messed around for 2 WEEKS trying to heal it….mashed some Purslane and applied it, no lie the next morning it was completely flat. Talk about amazed!!! 💯
WOW
Thanks for sharing this
@@nevermind7253 I’ve e since then planted a huge pot of Purslane and gloat to people about who only look at me like this 🫤…..😂😂😂
Thanks, so many of the natural wild plants have what I call all the "anti's" antibacterial, antiviral, anti fungal, anti-inflammatory. Evidently this is too
I had a large planter like yours with soil and compost in it, which I intended to plant something in. One day I went out and saw that God had decided I needed a big lovely patch of purslane. Father knows best.
It grow wild here in South Africa I think it was brought here by settlers from Holland
I spend hours removing this from my plant beds. I had no idea it's edible & healthy. Time to change my habits & save time as well.
Thanks for this info!
Ha, we had ducklings for a few weeks this spring and filled a little plastic pool for them to swim in. We'd then dump the water out onto our paver patio. Sadly, when the water went into the cracks, there was some fairly extensive duck poop and associated nutrients that went in also. For the first time ever, we've got purslane growing where the waste water went. Also a ton of little volunteer tomatoe plants. Amazing.
Yep, purslane grows as weed in flower pots😊
RIGHT ? And when u look it up all it says is toxic to humans , u gotta do so much research to learn its benefits.
I pulled some this morning that were attached to a newly bulbed onion... need to be careful. They get in there!
You will be surprised how good it is if you cook it right. If you know how to cook collard greens cook this the same way put some smoked pork ham hocks or something so good.
In my country we cook purslane as salad. Boil it not long, add salt, garlic and oil to your taste. Some add vinegar too. You can cook it an keep in fridge a couple of weeks. Very healthy,tasty food. Good for digestion,etc. Nice with fried chicken, potatoes, pork; goes well as a salad. More soft before it starts blooming.
🕯️🇬🇪 Georgia, Tbilisi ❤
Thank you for sharing your recipe for purslane salad from Georgia! It's great to know that it's a versatile ingredient that pairs well with fried chicken, potatoes, and pork.
Delicious with Pork stews and spicy food
Hey.. do you know if you can eat the more cultivated types of purslane..
I found some at my local greenhouse this spring. They came as either orange & white or pink & white flowers..
Very pretty.. 😊
I figured as I haven't had much luck growing beautiful fuchsias, I would try these the purslane instead.. they are doing quite well..😊
Just keep in mind, adding it to chicken or pork doesn't undo the health damaging effects of that food.
i NEED YOUR pURSLANE RECIPE- iT grows regularly here in NOHO California
I remember as a kid someone called the principal on me for trying to eat this exact plant. I got a detention and was told not to pick up random plants and eat them. She told me these were poisonous and I never touched it again.
Thanks public education, did me wonders.
Public education was designed to crush people so they would become dependent on the oligarchy
Well they program you on how to think so its not surprising
Lol we the people need to educate ourselves more on these things. She failed you. Like he was explaining spurge or milkweed is purslane's poisonous lookalike and I found them growing together as I was pulling purslane. The milkweed was bleeding milk right away when I broke the stem. Glad I noticed or they would've been mixed in.
Well I’m sure they were just trying to keep other little kids from potentially getting poisoned by eating the wrong thing.
Good advice not to eat unknown plants. Back then, I was told Indian corn wasn't edible.
I have this growing abundantly in my flower bed and I leave it to grow large to act as a ground cover because I like the way it looks. Knowing that I can eat it and it has high nutritional value makes me like it even more. Thanks for the info!
I have a lot of this under my tomato plants & around strawberry plants. I had heard that it was edible, but wasn't sure about it. I do like how it acts as a ground cover so I haven't tried to eliminate it, just reduce it somewhat. Salad for supper tonight, so I will go out and collect some purslane to give it a go. Thanks.
@@pmjohnston7987 How was your homegrown purslane salad? Did you enjoy it?
Nutrient rich is actually an understatement for purslane.
It is a super food! It is portrayed as King's foil or pig's weed in Lord of the Rings.
From there you know it increases rate of wound healing, neutralizes poisons etc...
It is a potent medicinal herb!
And it's nice to walk while gardening in the heat. 💚🖖
These are growing in my yard now and I am going to try a salad soon with it.😅
From my understanding Purslane was sold decades ago as a common vegetable in markets. It was common in the Midwest during the depression era years. What brought me here was it grows in my back yard as like a sort of spider like crawling weed in the back with distinct purple stem and bulbous flat mushy stubby leaves.
That is a really interesting historical point. I can imagine that, at that time in particular, there was a lot of trial and error to see which additional plants would be edible and grow readily. Thank you for sharing.
Purslane is commonly sold and consumed in Mexico.
Here in Southern California, it is still sold in some supermarkets that cater to the Latino community. However, the price is kind of high for such small bunches of bruised herbs. Fortunately, it grows wildly in my backyard and despite the neglect it looks a lot fresher and colorful than the commercially grown one. In Mexico it is cooked in a simple and delicious way, just sauteed with tomato, onion, garlic and some green chili (i.e. serranos). BTW, the preferred variety of grown purslane here is a green cultivar. The flavor is similar, but the purple one looks better, and it could possibly have more antioxidants.
We live in a rural area of Arizona- we have to haul our water, I mention this only to point out the fact that we seriously conserve water: it’s all dirt & rocks here. But yes, the mighty purslane weed/plant still continues to “pop up” all on its own. Thank you for pointing out the health benefits of this amazing power-house! ❤
I have it a lot in New Mexico too
Lived in AZ for several years and thought they were weeds. 😂 Haha. Now, I'm overseas, in a similar desert climate and know better this time.
New Mexico here and i have it everywhere
It’s in Ohio. I never knew what it was. I let it grow freely in my front yard this year. It’s crazy everywhere. But I live in an old dry river bottom. All sand & rock.
Gramma used it as a live mulch in her garden. We ate off it all summer long, then at last harvest she added it to her harvest relish. Love the stuff.
Around here if you try to do that, people get up in arms. LOL Good for your grqndma!
I'm in central Florida and all this rain looks like mine is dying 😢
I lived in the desert and it grew there without issue wherever I watered. I moved to the mountains (6840 feet) and it grows here too even with over three feet of snow on the ground during the winter, it still came up in the late spring!
I always had these growing in my outdoor houseplants. I took the seedlings and gave them their own pots . Realized I could eat them recently
In Jamaica it is called pusley . It is used in vegetables, vegetable salads smoothies green juices to name a few dishes
The stems can be eaten as well?
I've been eating this plant for years. But it also makes a fabulous farm animal fodder, my chickens and ducks absolutely love it, pigs, goats and sheep. It's an excellent cut-and-come-again plant I pull up all of the side shoots in one hand and cut about an inch and a half from the base so it can regrow. You can dig it up and Transplant it anywhere you'd like. Free food for us and our animals!
That's fantastic! It's wonderful that purslane provides free food for you and your animals. Keep up the good work!
There must be some purslane in the duck food you get at Tractor Supply... we had some ducklings this spring and now we have purslane!!!
And the deer love it. Only place I can keep it is the upper deck.
❤
True here in Asia too we give them to animals.....@@GutenGardening
My mexican mother would collect this weed and saute with potatoes, onions, and tomatoes. It was pretty good.
That sounds really good. I would try that for sure!
Throw some smoked pork in with it and that some good eating!
Verdaogas yuuum
I made is sauteed with avacado oil, onion, garlic, crushed red pepper and topped with lemon juice and parmesan cheese. Add a few pistachio nuts on top.
In Iran we call it parpin and older people call gholfe. We eat them with other edible plants with white cheese in morning or afternoon.
Fascinating! I could definitely see this tasting great with cheese. Thank you for the suggestion!
Do you have any recipes to share?
I found purslane (little hogweed, verdolagas) and spurge (milkweed) growing amongst each other in the same spot. I would've been confused but when i started pulling i noticed a milky substance coming out of some stems and i had already learned about milkweed being poisonous. The milkweed had tiny white flowers growing on it. The purslane had no flowers at this point but i have seen yellow flowers on it before. Now i know the difference.
Milkweed looks very different from spurge, very.
I think its a case of different plants being called the same thing. Additional folk names include wart spurge, summer spurge, umbrella milkweed, and wolf's-milk.@@PureU0Artificial
I grow purslane for my chickens and dehydrate some for soups
Thank you for pointing out the differences between it and spurge
I am sure the chickens love it, and we haven't tried dehyrdating it before, but that sounds like a great idea. Yeah, the spurge is a no go. I see a whole bunch of spurge growing nearby at a local grocery store. It definitely has some clear similarities.
My chickens won’t eat it:(
I have so much this in my garden! I use it as a ground cover to prevent other weeds. Didn’t know I could eat it. Thanks.
We are about to find out that a lot of common plants are edible
@@Fix-It-Jeff you can use as detox concoction. It helps deep clean all the veins and arteries. There are other herbs you'll need to add in rain water with 250 grams of these purslane. In 2.5 litres of water and 6 other herbs plus almonds and pumpkin seeds. Total ten items.
You'll need to boil it on very very low heat, until the liquid reduces to 1 litre.
Let it cool down and steep over night or 16 hours then sieve it and fill the air tight bottle.
Once it's all ready you'll need to take this concoction 25 mls to 75 mls honey 🍯🍯.
Mix it to resemble as a syrup.
Always Store in fridge.
Note
It has to be stored in the fridge all the time until when you are ready to use take it out mix it vigorously then have I teaspoon full and drink a glass of water last thing in the night.
Collect the first urine when you get up leave for a while and you'll see all the toxins have settled at the bottom of the jar.
It's amazing results you can watch the testimonial on media if you wish. It's on all the platforms.
Good luck. 🙏🤞👍🙌🙌🙌🙌
Purslane grows in soil that other plants will not grow in. I make soup out of it and my kids love it. A red onion, some salt, tomato, and put it all in some broth and it tastes great!
Thanks for the tips!
Just heard about how we can eat Purslane a few months ago and now I'm cultivating it instead of giving it to the chickens. I really like the taste and the crunch.
That's fantastic! Enjoy the fresh harvest from your own garden! 🌿😊🍽️
Purslane showed up last year in my fairly new raised beds. She volunteered from somewhere!
Maybe the birds, maybe the mulch or compost but there she was!
I was so excited as, somehow I recognized it as purslane from earlier herb studies.
So I checked online, just to be sure and began harvesting to eat.
Yummy!
Now it self-seeds and is back again this year!
I leave her alone and although we’ve had drought here for several weeks, she’s come back after a rain and I harvested some.
Plan to keep it as a ground cover and edible super-food!
In my area, it's known as 'Mexican lettuce' because it can be eaten raw or cooked. This plant can be a noxious weed if it isn't culled/thinned/harvested frequently. Be sure you want it before you plant it or you might be sorry when it takes over your garden. It actually makes a fairly attractive ground cover with its shiny green leaves and bright yellow flowers...
'Mexican lettuce,' a versatile plant with many names, indeed! Embrace its versatility while staying vigilant in your garden. Happy gardening! Thanks for sharing.
I let mine go wild last year in between all of my food plants. The whole garden looked gorgeous with these lovely green low mats surrounding each plant and the purslane blocked out all other weeds. It was easy to pull up the ones who wanted to crowd the big plants… those went to the salad bowl!
my mexican mom calls it verdolagas. We eat it with eggs and lots of lime with tortillas
This sounds interesting where can we get it beginning for it?
@@willislively3627 It's grows all over the city and sidewalks.
It's a common weed in Africa (North East of Namibia) and we take it as vegetable we've been eating those days as well. Now it is like disappearing this years.
In my vernacular language in Namibia we called Purslane, "Dihenya." in mbukushu language.
That other weed you showed us which look similar to purslane, do grow here too but we don't eat that one now.
This a good plant to have in case of food shortage. Super nutritious. Should Grow as much as possible.
@@cgreen777
Agreed.
Purslane is a neat plant, both in its use and the succulent way it grows. It is certainly one of the nicer "weeds" in the garden and usually grows fairly nicely alongside the veggies etc. Thank you for the shout out as well that was really nice of you and we really appreciate it! The purslane relish video was one of our older videos but it is a really nice recipe and worth trying!
It is really cool, and we enjoy the taste, though I also know they can overwhelm pretty quickly. You are welcome for the shoutout. Any time we can reference something we have learned from other channels, we will do our best to do so. :) Have a wonderful evening!
Right about that, I wish all weeds were that easy to pull
mom always made Chuleta de Puerco con Verdolagas / pork chop with purslane (onions 'n tomatoes added)
i actually pick them wherever i find it and plant it in my garden and eat 😋
That sounds delicious!
I love purselane and mixed in a salad of other greens it is delicious! I do recommend giving it its own raised bed area so it doesn’t overrun other vegetables. Nice channel by the way. You now have a new subscriber 😊
my mom started using Purslane last year because someone told her about how good it tastes in rice and its benefits. It is such an easy plant to grow, and it looks beautiful, especially with its yellow flowers. Recently, I noticed a weed popped up in another pot that looked similar to the Purslane, but the leaves are wider. So I've been watching it trying to figure out why that one looked so different, I started thinking maybe it was a weed of the same family of Purslane. Now I know that must be the Spurge. Thank you for making this video, :) 👍 it's very informative.
Thanks for sharing your experience! While we can't confirm the identification without more information, it's great that you're observing the differences. It's always good to exercise caution and further investigate. We appreciate your feedback and engagement with the video!
eugh, who Spurged in your plant pot???
I was trying to pull this purslane from my community garden and a fellow gardener who is Asian and doesn't speak English or French dropped by and started scolding me with hand gestures. She asked if she could have some and I pratically gave it all to her. If I understood correctly, she uses it in stir-fries.
That is so interesting. Different cultures have different cuisines, and so, similar to huitlacoche, we react differently to the various plants in our space. This one is definitely delicious.
Purslane and chickweed taste a little better than grass, but are full of nutrients. Curly doc, poke salet picked young, wild lettuce, viola and violet leaves, and lambs quarters are also edible as well as wild chives. Lambs quarter is as good as spinach. Wild mustard, and stinging nettle are good. Stinging nettle is my favorite greens. There is nothing out there, commercially produced or wild, that tastes better than stinging nettle.
Thanks for the information
LOVE wild mustard!
What's the best recipe for stinging nettle
We have a lot of wild mustard around here, also plantain, shepherd,s Purse, and others.
Note about purslane how it tastes s also determined on the time of the day you harvest it. If you harvest it early in the morning, it has a nice, mild flavor. Pick it later in the day and it will be somewhat bitter.
Thanks for that information
Interesting, thanks 🙏
Love Purslane or verdolagas (Spanish). Went to have Chinese with some friends and my husband spied this beautiful growth on their lawn. We put it in a box, brought it home, and I cooked it next day. It was SO delicious. Now every time we go over there, Lou looks their lawn over. Yum
Wonderful! Thanks for sharing.
I keep this and use it for menopause symptoms. I love all my weeds and use them for tons of different uses.
I have heard that before! It is amazing how often we just discard things as weeds, when they really could be much more beneficial to us.
What does it do to help menopause symptoms??
I like to make a limeaide drink, with purslane,, lime, water and maple syrup in a blender. So good!
Cooking removes the Oxilates. The seeds are very nutritious as well.
thank you for sharing!
I was wondering about how heating might decrease the oxalates too, as it does in other "weeds".
My mother used to cook it with lentils and shredded coconut as a side dish curry
Added to rice and clarified butter it is absolutely delicious
They sell these in vegetable market sometimes
When I see it in my garden I pluck it but my gardener keeps pulling it out
I just had it raw in salad form. Very delicious with other salad greens.
Also, make it with olive oil, onions, tomatoes and spices. Delish‼️😍🖐️❤️🙏✝️
“Weeds are flowers too, once you get to know them.”
-Eeyore
Great video! Doesn’t purslane also fix nitrogen in the soil?
Great question. I have been researching and I haven't found that it is a nitrogen fixer, but I don't really know fully. :)
Purslane is delicious as an addition to a salad. A unusual, lemony flavor.
The tart flavor is from the abundance of oxalic acid.
Purslane Portulaca oleracea (common purslane, also known as verdolaga, pigweed, little hogweed, red root, pursley) is an annual succulent in the family Portulacaceae
This plant possesses mucilaginous substances which are of medicinal importance. It is a rich source of potassium (494 mg/100 g) followed by magnesium (68 mg/100 g) and calcium (65 mg/100 g) and possesses the potential to be used as vegetable source of omega-3 fatty acid.
Very true! Thank you so much for the information.
hmmmm interesting, I believe this plant has originated in Portugal, maybe the Azores.
Thanks 4 the information on the nutrients this plant contains, I've just come across this video and the plant sounds amazing, thank you
Pigweed and red root are a different plant, also edible.
Pigweed/redroot is an AMARANTH. Totally different. (Also edible and left in my veg garden.)
Great video and great flow of information. You managed to provide a lot of detail without any of the video feeling padded or unnecessary. Thank you!
Thank you for the positive feedback! It means a lot. Guten gardening! 🌼🌿🎥
In Mexico it’s called Verdolaga, and it’s eaten cooked or raw. My favorite is cooked with pork and a green tomatillo sauce. Now we can find it at our local grocery store or pick your own farm in a nearby town.
It has a fruit called Pyxidium ,a cup like thing with a tiny lid as and when it matures enough the lid automatically falls of dispersing very tiny black seeds ,when we clean Purslane with water for cooking,the black seeds settle down,if u throw this water in a pot they will germinate!!
Great! Thank you for the tips.
Its a nice accent in a salad, but difficult to eat on it's own between the sliminess and the astringency. I planted a bunch of selected green purslane seeds around my gardens and yard 5+ years ago, and I think it has naturalized now. Its endemic to the area, but I think the plants in our yard are hardier and more succulent than the stuff growing up from the sidewalk.
I have it all over my yard both front and back. Based on the information in this video I will try it. Actually I will have to wait until spring/summer of 2023 as it has gotten to cold in southern New Jersey to grow outdoors in our area. I am eager to try it.
Here's a fun fact: portulaca (aka moss rose) will reseed as a purslane. At least mine always did. I'd get one year from what I planted, the next year I'd get some reseeding of portulaca, but mostly what I'd get is a garden full of purslane. And yes, I ate it.
I get it in pots from birds
😎
@@debrabeghtol4332 what is the difference between portulaca and purselane?
I was looking for moss rose at the garden center today and they were sold out. They showed me the purslane they were selling. But I'm thinking 🤔 is it spurge? and is it edible? Doesn't look like the purslane I've seen previously.
@@goccogrrl moss rose is a low growing flower I can't seem to grow from seed. Purslane is a common weed I can't seem to find now that I want to taste it. Other than that, I'm trying to figure that out myself.
Hey there I live in New Orleans and I find that I often see spurge growing almost entangled with purslane. And you can tell the difference between the two when you feel the leaves like you said the purslane has a meteor feel thicker like you said more succulent as where the spurge has just a flat leaf field. Thank you for your video on this I am trying to spread the good news about purslane to people and I grow it myself! God bless everyone who reads this
Thanks for sharing!
God Bless you, as well... ❤
Is the spurge edible also or should it be avoided?
@@kathrynralli4557 should be avoided! 😟
@@kathrynralli4557 AVOID!!! Poisonous
I didn't know it's more important when cleaning the farm we throw them, from to day will star using them thanks far sharing.
I did not know it's etable, I have it growing in my yard and have always protected it and thanks God now I know what it's loaded with. I'm definitely going to let my friends know about it and share beyond. Thank you UA-cam, I just love you for so much knowledge. Wow wow beautiful ❤❤
You should try it Pickler, it is delicious, aboid the real thick stems they can make it a bit slimy, collect the young stems and leaves, simmer some white rice vinegar or apple cider vinegar with some salt and pepper corns some mustard seeds and some hot pepper flakes, put in glass jar cover till top close and refrigerate fir 2 days, delicious with rice recipes 😊
In Malabon,Philippines they call it sea puslane or "Dampalit" and use it for cooking fish or make it pickle vegetable.
Thank you for sharing that interesting information! It's fascinating to learn about the various names and culinary uses of purslane around the world.
Purslane whole plant is fantastic and very tasty, good for health....we have been eating for the past fifty years.
Very good! Thanks for sharing.
Nowadays I've stopped to plant cabbages on my tiny farm 😊
I just go out and select from the tenth of amazing seasonal herbs that spontaneously grow everywhere!! 😄 ♥️ 💕 ❤️ 🌿🌿🌱🌱
All I have to do is to be careful not to step on my food!!
It's even more amazing because as much as I use the more they grow! And the more they grow and occupy the land the more some very dangerous herbs (for the cats and dogs) disappear!!!
The amount of great benefits to our health these primordial foods gives us is no match for cabbages and other modified vegetables.
Also saves us a lot of money! They are soo good and delicious 😋 💕❤️ This year I've finally got a MORINGA and a ORA PRO NOBIS 😍💝
Moringa is one of my favorites...
This is one of my favorite wild edibles. I like to saute It until it's chronchy . It reminds me of baked pumpkin seeds without the pulp .👌
Great video.
You have a new subscriber.
Sounds great! Thank you.
you have here made a first class presentation, thank you!
I live in the Mojave desert, i use purslane as ground cover in my planters to keep the direct sunlight off the soil.
That's a great idea!
I love these, after cleaning and boiling it I fry it up with peppers onion and tomatoes and some smoked pork so so freaking good👍🏻 u find it everywhere here in Florida specially in strawberry fields. I love colored greens but honestly I believe these are better!
I love purslane! Living in Turkey, you can not only buy it in the farmers markets but the supermarket produce section. And...restaurants! Thanks for sharing and helping others to eat their weeds!!
That's wonderful to hear! Purslane is indeed a versatile and nutritious plant, and it's great that it's easily available in Turkey. It's fantastic to see people embracing the idea of incorporating "weeds" into their meals. Thank you for your support!
Pirinçli semizotu yemeği 😋
I have been eating this plant for over sixty years. ..Thanks to my Father on Father's day..although he is no longer with me..
If you have lots, and don't want to eat it, add it to your compost pile. It's great for adding trace minerals to your soil!
Thank you for the suggestion!
Thank you for bringing up oxalates. When you said that it was very like spinach, I instantly wondered if I could eat it. I can’t eat spinach, beets, rhubarb, etc because I’ve had many kidney stones. It’s sad for me because I bought wild purslane seeds.
Very sorry to hear this, but maybe you can still grow it and share with others...😊
Traditional Chinese medicine has excellent remedies for kidney stones. Try camomile tea, too. I used to give it to my tomcat for his bladder stones. He never got them as long as he was getting a dose of camomile tea in his water!
Try taking some D3-K2 vitamins as the K2 takes calcium out of soft tissues & puts it in bones.
@@jswhosoever4533 Yep. More like PAIN!!!!!!!!! A urine crystal is all jagged, like a ball of points. Believe me, when you get one, you will KNOW ALL ABOUT IT.
The oxalates are sour and more pronounced in 'dry environment' plants. Keep 'em watered and enjoy in moderation.
It's in my fridge, for the 1st time, right now. My garden is over-run with it. I've eaten bits as I've gardened & am working up the courage to brown some garlic & eat it together. (I don't have many potential ingredients handy & not many recipes I've found sound appetizing.)
Fingers crossed that I've got a new, nearly free food :)
If you're looking for more recipe inspiration, be sure to check out the comment section below. There might be some hidden gems shared by fellow gardeners and food enthusiasts. Don't be afraid to try new combinations and get creative in the kitchen. You might just discover a delicious and healthy new favorite!
@@GutenGardening Absolutely, my dude. Some comment sections are gold! Always happy to see a positive, helpful comment section.
No joke: it gives me hope for the world wide community
I have a purslane garden with 4 different cultivars. I put them in salads and on sandwiches. They are pretty good. I've been growing Purslane for about 30 years. They always come back. I don't have to do anything with it.
Great to hear you've been growing purslane for 30 years with multiple cultivars! It's low-maintenance, nutritious, and tasty. Keep up the good work!
Any interesting differences between types, did you find them all locally? Cheers
@@assertivekarma1909 Some were local and some were from England. They each taste a little different.
I love purslain and have tried to start it where I live and it just dont like it .
Quick fry it in a little bacon grease and garlic just a minute ,before it gets musilegenic . Yummm
Ive been cultivating it for years after ifound out how EXPENSIVE it is in fancy restaurants 😇
Yep, we Mexicans know it as Verdolagas and it's typically cook with pork stew on green or red sauce ...it has a very unique taste .
very delicious.
This plant also has the peculiarity of coexisting C4 and CAM (crassulacean acid metabolism) photosynthetic pathways (which seems to be quite rare as plants tend to be C3, C4 or CAM but not combinations). The observation about the taste changing when well watered is likely because the CAM metabolism will switch on and become predominant under drought conditions.
When purslane is depending mostly on the CAM pathway (that is, under dry conditions), you should also be able to tell the difference in how tart it tastes between picking it and tasting it in the morning and in the evening. This is because malic acid will accumulate during the night to a peak early morning and then it will be consumed by the tissues during the day to reach a low at the end of the day.
Malic acid or Oxalic acid? I know that purslane contains significant amounts of oxalic acid, which is known to cause kidney stones in susceptible people.
@@randybugger3006, mostly, I don't actually know.
The relevant species when it comes to CAM would be malate. That does not mean P. oleracea does not also contain oxalate (which it does). I do not know if you'd see a similar fluctuation with oxalate. It looks like there's a pathway from malate to oxaloacetate to oxalate that could convert malate to oxalate so maybe it could also cycle with the malate? Whether it dominates or is a minor reaction (just because the pathway is there doesn't mean it is favored at any one time) , I couldn't tell you.
Thanks for the information guys.
Thank you! I appreciate it.
Oxalate @@randybugger3006
Also, oxalates are removed when cooked in water and strained, so this would be an excellent addition to cooked dishes like pasta,
Great tip!
My garden is full of it. For last 10 years I'm using it as salad. For last 5 years I'm pickling it the same way as cucumber. Good salad at winter.
In Bangladesh, It's known as Gima Shak (গিমা শাক)।
It's sometimes neglected, as it grows pretty much anywhere and it tastes bitter, but no one disputes it's medicinal properties, in such case, it is comparable to Neem (নীম). Another neglected, yet medicinally "praised" plant (Tree).
Thanks for sharing!
My area probably called "Halencha "is it wrong?
It is bitter? the video does not mention that.
We use the purslane in my homeland 🇱🇧 in salads, cooking …
Thanks for the update & share
It can be so useful! We are compiling community recipes right now!
My neighbor ate spurge every spring for many years because he thought it was purslane, though he complained that it would give him a stomach ache in large quantities, but then he would just toss a beer down to fix it. If you have kidney issues, avoid Tylenol and similar meds. People have eaten oxalate-containing foods forever...
Thanks for sharing! It's crucial to correctly identify edible plants and be mindful of preexisting health conditions when trying new foods. Some foods contain oxalates, which can be problematic for people with kidney issues. It's a great reminder to be cautious and informed about our health.
I had this come up in "abandoned" flower pots and just left it because I liked the way it looked (instinct?) Now I intend to encourage its growth and munch on it. Thanks for the enlightenment!
Sounds great!
We Vietnamese have been eating this plant! It is know as rau sam.
Great! Thanks for sharing.
I am Indian I cook this with lentils and it grows very well in my garden.it keeps coming back after plucking.
This plant grows in my burn pile in rural Oregon, where I burn fallen branches and other woody waste in spring and fall (when the ground is WET at least 6" down). It keeps coming back, in spite of the intense heat of the bonfire, resulting ashes, and NO water. My llamas like to eat it in summer. Glad to know it isn't toxic!
Very resilient plants!
When COVID-19 hit, and everyone was buying all the toilet paper. We ran out of toilet paper, and had no other choice. We started using the Purslane to wipe ourselves, and it actually healed me of my decades long hemorrhoids problem. Today, i stand - still using Purslane to wipe, everyday.
Lol, seriously???
purslane for toilet paper? i think you mean mullein....
@@isabellekeyzer Mullein??? if left unfiltered, would give you a helluva rash.
Eat it. Full of vitamin A
Lol mullein ya mook
i know about it 2 years and collect it to prepare it like the small cucumbers in glasses. water, vinegar, portulak and spices. fill it in glasses and cover it with the other cooked ingredients. so you can use it during the winter too. it is very good and healthy. here in switzerland it grows in every natural place. you can make soup of it too. thank you for this informative video 🙏
Hello dear friend, very interesting info about Purslane. Have a lovely day.
Thank you so much! It is a unique and interesting plant with lots of benefits. I think you would enjoy it.
I just started doing this too, spring I lay down wood chips and the Purslane of course isn't stopped and it grows nice and is tasty but the other weeds are less aggressive and have trouble through the chips. I'm still learning about this little plant that I recently discovered and its abundant by where I grow my Blueberries.
My mom cooks it with lentils in India. Very common saag, but unfortunately not available in markets nowadays.
That sounds like a delicious idea. We love cooking with lentils, so maybe we can try this as an addition to the lentils.
I have a ton of this in my flowerbed. That taproot tip is very helpful 👊🏻🌻👊🏻
i love its great lemony taste, one of the best weeds
It really is quite tasty, and it is definitely plentiful where we are!
I got excited when I found purslane (Verdolaga) growing wild in my yard! I had not seen any for about 7 years. What a treat!
Wow I have so much of that lol Guess I'll transplant some to a container and give it some love. 🌱
Give it a taste and let us know what you think! I personally like the taste quite a lot. To me it is pretty refreshing. :)
@@GutenGardening you had me at anti-inflammatory so I'm going to try for sure once I plump it up. Don't want my first taste to be a bad one 😬😁
@@GutenGardening It was kinda bitter but just 2 days ago while weeding the Strawberry bed for winter prep I tried again. My thought process was things tend to get sweeter as the cool Autumn air rolls in. I wouldn't say it was sweet per say but was more eatable.
I leave this plant in my raised bed as a decorative plant, and it grows so vigorously I can chop and drop for easy mulch. Didn't know it was edible though
I know that purslane is edible, and has healthy benefits, I’ve seen it a lot, everyone says it has a lemony flavor, so, every time I saw it, I’d eat a few leaves, unfortunately, I taste no hint of lemon, it’s bland to me. But, reading the comments here, making pesto, adding to salads, cooking with food, I’ll start foraging it again, but as for cooking which I feel will take away nutrients from it, I’ll add after food is cooked. Thank u
Joy, thanks for sharing!
lightly steamed to decrease the oxalates it is still delicious and nutritious.
I make tincture with it. Cut into smaller pieces (I use a pizza cutter), put in a mason jar, and cover with vodka. Let it steep in the refrigerator for a couple weeks, shake it up every day, strain, and bottle up in a dropper bottle. I do the same with dandelion. 1-2 ml per day 😃 I do love it fresh too!
What do you use the tincture for?
We've got lots of this in our garden. We stir-fry or steam it. Tastes good. I love it. The stem can be a little sour, though, so I can't have it too often.
Thanks for the tips!
We grew up eating this plant and I love it. In Mexico it’s called verdolaga. We bring to light boil with garlic salt, and onion. Strain and fry some turkey then add it in with some beaten egg a little cumin and pepper. Add hot peppers to your taste and you’re good to go. For best taste harvest before it buds/blossoms.
Good video. I've never grown Purslane because it grows wild on my property. My fav way to eat this is raw in salads. I also make Purslane Quiche and that is delicious! I've also made a creamy dish using cheese and cream mixed in with Purslane. It's such a treat to have in warm weather!
Cheers to delicious meals and warm weather!
good stuff, I've eaten it for decades. I eat leaves, flowers, seeds. stems are rather fibrous so I only eat young ones. Leaves are great sauteed, stir fried, in soups, salads and as 'walking snacks' when I want something while I wander.
Thank you for this video. I’ve been trying to find the answer to my question, but I’ve not found it yet. I purchased purslane last summer from Home Depot for the beauty of its colorful flowers. I just love them. I had no idea purslane could be edible until researching it. Of course I’m certain the pots I bought were grown with pesticides. These died back during the winter I thought I’d lost them for sure. But I got them back out in early April, pruned just a little, watered and have only fertilized once with miracle grow. They are slightly watered everyday and gorgeous! My question is, They’ve not been sprayed this year with any pesticides, would they be safe to put on a salad? Can the flowers be consumed and should they? Thank you very much!
Hello! Great question! Yes, you can eat the leaves, stems, and flowers. All are delicious!
He said already that all of the plant is edible.
We have it in our yard every where and I'm always snacking on it. I always find it very neutral tasting: doesn't have a whole lot of flavor but it can be sweeter (less bitter) when full of moisture. It's great. Thanks.
I've read that aboriginal people turn the seeds into flour. That would require a whole lot of seeds, but it is a pretty good idea if you have a large supply.
That is so interesting! I had never heard that before. Now I want to research that further. This stuff does grow everywhere, though, so I am not surprised.
I started Purslane in my garden this year. I`ve only seen it in sidewalk cracks here and never successfully transplanted it. So I bought seeds to learn how to grow it. The taste reminds me of spinach.
Best of luck!
I'm getting seeds from my children and I think it has a lemony taste. I like to put in salads or as a topping on veggies.
That's a great idea! Please return and give us an update.
@@GutenGardening sure thing, I'm prepping the soil now, I love herbs, growing them, adding to soups, dry them, give as gifts, nutritious way to get vitamins. I ground seeds like fennel, flax,
Researched this plant before I listened to your advice, and you were right on about everything. It is a health plant, that everyone should grow. Research it for yourself to verify it helps in these areas' cancers, diabetes, anti-inflammatory, heart, and much more. Everyone should have and use this plant and they will go to the dr less often; because they will not have the problems.
very cool. First discovered it when I was buying preprepared boxes of organic veggies from a local organic biz. The lady was a bit crazy… one of them “totally raw” vegans😅. Haha not me! But a good biz and they put purslane in the box and I was all wtf is this?! So looked it up and was like ohhh ok. And that was several years ago and now every once in a while videos like yours here pops up into my feed and I enjoy them. Uhhhh… no offense if you are a vegan🙂lol that is totally fine just make sure you’re getting enough protein by other means. Me I try to be your traditional human omnivore like most humans all throughout the history of all mankind😅
Oh man, this is fantastic to know. I noticed my dog eating it out of the garden and I just thought it was a nuisance. It grows in everything no matter what I plant the next thing you know I got one of these things popping up with it. I also have something that looks like this, but it flowers, a fluorescent pink, orange, yellow Blooms on it and I have no idea what that is either.
I have tons of that growing in my yard and it's delicious 😋!
Awesome! How do you prepare it?
@@GutenGardening I prefer to have it raw on top of a salad or pasta or a baked potato. I've also had it with seafood as it's lemony flavor pairs well. Purslane is still good cooked, but it loses some of the succulent crunch.
Awesome! Thanks for sharing.