Carlton Komatsuna

$5.00
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This is a wonderfully versatile leafy green - add it to stir fry or sautéed as a side, toss into a soup or a salad for some added texture and flavor.

It’s a relative to kales, cabbages and bok choi, so mix up your recipes with a new contender!

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This is a wonderfully versatile leafy green - add it to stir fry or sautéed as a side, toss into a soup or a salad for some added texture and flavor.

It’s a relative to kales, cabbages and bok choi, so mix up your recipes with a new contender!

This is a wonderfully versatile leafy green - add it to stir fry or sautéed as a side, toss into a soup or a salad for some added texture and flavor.

It’s a relative to kales, cabbages and bok choi, so mix up your recipes with a new contender!

Komatsuna (コマツナ(小松菜)) or Japanese mustard spinach (Brassica rapa var. perviridis) is a leaf vegetable. It is a variety of Brassica rapa, the plant species that yields the turnip, mizuna, napa cabbage, and rapini. It is grown commercially in Japan and Taiwan. It is a versatile vegetable that is cooked and eaten in many ways. The plant is also used for fodder in some Asian countries.

The name 'komatsuna' means 'greens of Komatsu' in Japanese, a reference to the village of Komatsugawa [ja] in Edogawa, Tokyo, where it was heavily grown during the Edo period.[1] It was named by Tokugawa Yoshimune, the eighth shogun, who visited Edogawa in 1719 for hunting and stopped at the local Katori Shrine for lunch. The shrine priest served him soup with a rice cake and a local leaf vegetable. The shogun was impressed by the flavor of the vegetable so much and named it komatsuna, after the nearby Komatsu River[2] (which gives Komatsugawa its name). Till this day, the Shin-Koiwa Katori Shrine offers komatsuna to the deities on New Year's Eve. People who come to the shrine to pray on New Year's Day are also given komatsuna for good luck in the new year.