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Mustard Green Seeds Chinese Asian Vegetable Seeds BAU-Sin Chinese Mustard Seeds
Mustard Greens. These pungent leafy greens from the brassica family are traditional fare in Asia, Africa, the Southeastern US, and other regional pockets. Their familiar spicy-mustard flavor
When planting mustard greens seeds, plant each seed just under the soil about a half inch (1 cm.) apart. After the seeds sprout, thin the seedlings to 3 inches (8 cm.) apart. If you’re planting seedlings, plant them 3 to 5 inches (8-13 cm.) apart beginning three weeks before your last frost date.
Once seeds have sprouted, thin to 3 inches apart. For seedlings, plant them 3-5 inches apart 3 weeks before your last frost date. Make sure your greens get full or partial sun. Mustard greens grow best in cooler weather so plant in early spring or mid-late fall. Water about 2 inches a week and keep the area weed free.
Salads are one of the most delicious foods to eat with mustard. Mustard is the perfect ingredient to use in a healthy salad dressing recipe that you can keep in the fridge for weeks. Combine mustard with a bit of apple cider vinegar, black pepper, parsley, lemon juice and water.
Although technically a biennial (or a plant that takes two years to go through its entire lifecycle), gardeners in the United States grow mustard greens as an annual. This cool-weather crop prefers spring and fall temperatures to intense summer heat and can provide both an early and late harvest during a single growing season.
Sweet, slightly pungent, elegant, and rare heirloom mustard from Australia grows 10-12" tall with crinkly, light green leaves. Add fresh to salads or saute with other greens