Turnips
#11
#12
Power Poster
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 15,963
Unless greens are cooked right they will taste bitter and strong with an unpleasant aftertaste. Greens like turnip, mustard, and collards have to be simmered with the right seasoning. If you buy large can of Seasoned turnip greens in a can and add a small can of unseasoned, simmer with beef or chicken stock they will be perfect. Fresh greens are really too much work to wash five times, destem and have wilt down to fit the pot. My grandmother always had turnip or collard greens growing or bought. She said they kept you healthy.
#13
Power Poster
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Mableton, GA
Posts: 11,203
Unless greens are cooked right they will taste bitter and strong with an unpleasant aftertaste. Greens like turnip, mustard, and collards have to be simmered with the right seasoning. If you buy large can of Seasoned turnip greens in a can and add a small can of unseasoned, simmer with beef or chicken stock they will be perfect. Fresh greens are really too much work to wash five times, destem and have wilt down to fit the pot. My grandmother always had turnip or collard greens growing or bought. She said they kept you healthy.
#14
I eat them raw, slice them up sprinkle some salt on them and have at it! My siblings and I have been eating them that way since we were kids. Same with tomatoes, wash them off and eat them like an apple. Raw green beans, radishes, slices of the turnips cucumbers, just about any fresh veggie that can be eaten raw Mom and Dad kept in the frig for us to grab and eat.
#15
#16
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 9,520
#17
My mom grew up in the Dirty 30's and one thing that actually would grow on their land, was turnips. She hated them so much, that she never planted them in her garden and we never ate them, growing up. I honestly don't know what they taste like or how to prepare them. Are they similar to parsnips? Or rutabagas?
I'm not particularly fond (finger down the throat) of wilted greens of any sort. It is a texture issue for me, so pretty sure I would be tossing the leafy part if it was in my house.
I'm not particularly fond (finger down the throat) of wilted greens of any sort. It is a texture issue for me, so pretty sure I would be tossing the leafy part if it was in my house.
Last edited by GingerK; 07-19-2023 at 02:08 PM.
#18
Super Member
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Tavistock, Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,056
I love mashed turnip - cook till soft, drain and mash with butter salt, pepper and a tiny bit of brown sugar or maple syrup. And love 'em raw too! DH's family wouldn't even try them raw when I took raw veggies to a meal ... but then if you couldn't douse it in sugar, they didn't eat it.
#19
Senior Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: May 2010
Location: SW, MI
Posts: 827
Thanks to all the suggestions. Years back I took a full roasting pan of root vegetables for Thanksgiving and held my breath thinking everyone would hate them. Imagine my surprise when I went back for seconds and found they were all gone!!! Even the kids went after them.
So, I did try the simplest suggestion. I sliced it thin, cooked until soft, drained and sprinkled with salt and added a little butter. Much to my surprise - we both liked it. I was imagining a pungent taste, but it's actually mild and that seems to fit my (now) bland-ish taste buds.
Thanks everyone.
So, I did try the simplest suggestion. I sliced it thin, cooked until soft, drained and sprinkled with salt and added a little butter. Much to my surprise - we both liked it. I was imagining a pungent taste, but it's actually mild and that seems to fit my (now) bland-ish taste buds.
Thanks everyone.