🔥 Celebrate new books on our BBQ & Grilling shelf with 25% off ckbk membership 🔥
Published 2001
Also
chard ,spinach beet ,leaf beet Including
rainbow (multicolor) chard
As of this sentence, I will no longer add “Swiss” to chard. After 25 years of futile probing I can -find no significant reason to keep it. Even an international authority on Beta, Dr. Brian Ford-Lloyd of the School of Biosciences at the University of Birmingham, could offer no more explanation than that “there is a Swiss national collection of leaf beet [and chard] genetic resources, which I assume means that the crop is of some importance to the Swiss.” He also located a mention in Transactions of the Horticultural Society for 1822 that a variety planted that year had been grown “from seeds presented by Sir SamuelYoung. . . . He found it used as a vegetable on the Banks of the Rhine, and in Switzerland, and has . . . cultivated it very much this season; he speaks highly of its merit.” Interesting, but hardly enough to justify “Swiss” chard.
Unlimited, ad-free access to hundreds of the world’s best cookbooks
Over 150,000 recipes with thousands more added every month
Recommended by leading chefs and food writers
Powerful search filters to match your tastes
Create collections and add reviews or private notes to any recipe
Swipe to browse each cookbook from cover-to-cover
Manage your subscription via the My Membership page
Monthly plan
Annual plan
Advertisement
Advertisement