Greens
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Greens means "green leafy vegetables."
Depending on how the speaker means the word, it can mean salad greens or cooking greens. Salad greens are just any leafy green vegetable that you are going to use fresh in a salad.
Most of the time, though, Greens is used to mean leafy green vegetables that might be cooked. If someone says he is going to "fix you up a mess of greens", it probably doesn't involve a bottle of Thousand Island Dressing, but it might involve bacon fat. Among such greens are Brussels Tops, Beet Leaves, Collard, Kale, Turnip Leaves, Spinach and Swiss Chard. For the most part, they are cabbage family members whose leaves don't clump together in a head.
Such cooking greens could be eaten raw, but they are cooked to mellow the flavour, which is usually a bit bitter, and to tenderize them.
Greens are well liked in the American south. Acres would be given over to growing them to provide cheap nutrition to the slaves. The slaves were also given leftover pig bits such as the trotters. With these pieces of pork, the slaves came up a style of cooking Greens that the white people then adopted. In the south, a cooked dish of Greens is often referred to as a "mess of greens." The juice left in the pot after cooking Greens is well liked by southerners as well; they call it "Pot Likker."
Most greens have slightly bitter flavour that responds well to a low and slow braising, especially if some fat is added, either in the form of butter, oil, milk or smoked or salted pork.
Sometimes Greens for cooking are also called "Pot Herbs."
When buying, choose crisp leaves with deep colour and no yellowing or bug holes.
Cooking Tips for Greens
Salad greens such as Rocket and Watercress are lovely when just slightly wilted in a warm dish; their peppery taste becomes slightly mellowed and sweetened.
Also called:
Pot Herbs; Quelite (Spanish)
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See Also:
Pot Likker
Other entries for: Greens
Collard Greens, Gai Choy, Greens, Horseradish Greens, Kale, Mustard Greens, Orach, Spinach, Swiss Chard, Swollen Stem Mustard, Turnip Greens, Water Spinach
Other entries for: Leafy Vegetables
Agave, Artichokes, Branch Lettuce, Dandelion, Endive, Enset, Frisée, Horseradish Tree, Lamb's Quarters, Lettuce, Lotus, Mesclun Mix, Mizuna, Pak Wan, Potherbs, Rocket
Other entries for: Vegetables
Asparagus, Brassica Family, Mushrooms, Peppers, Root Vegetables, Seaweed, Sprouts, Squash, Tomatoes



