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Rocket, also known as arugula, is a leafy green that's good for salads.

Plant: rhubarb, rocket and more!

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Here's a selection of plants that will look great in your garden and add spicy flavours to your cooking.

Some of these leafy green plants include

Rocket

Eruca sativa

Rocket is an easily grown annual that can be harvested for months. Sow seed direct into well-drained fertile soil or raise seedlings in punnets. Plant out quickly to avoid seedlings bolting. Plant seedlings in pockets amongst other plants to distract pest insects from your main crops. Raw rocket leaves give a peppery zing to salads, with young leaves milder in taste. Add to stir-fries or whip up some pesto. Blitz leaves with olive oil and freeze. As plants mature, their yellow flowers attract bees and beneficial insects and are a tasty addition to salads, as are the young, green seed pods. Rocket self-seeds easily so there’s no need to buy seedlings each year.

Rhubarb ‘Ever Red’

Rheum x hybridum

‘Ever Red’ has vigorous, deep-crimson stems with full flavour. It can be picked all year round if kept well-fed and watered. Plant this long-lived perennial in well-drained soil with well-rotted compost and manures. Plant crowns in winter, seedlings in spring, plants anytime. Note that in tropical climates, it is grown in winter as an annual. Pick stems from outside of the plant to avoid leaves laying on the ground and rotting. Suitable for large pots. Remove leaves before cooking – they are poisonous but can be used for weed control (lay large leaves over small weeds to smother them). Try stewing stems in water or apple juice with apples or quinces, or turn into jams, chutneys, pies, cakes or wine. Slow bake on sprigs of native thyme (Prostanthera rotundifolia). These leafy green plants stems can be frozen for later use.

Coriander

Coriandrum sativum

Coriander is a quick-growing annual, integral to the cuisine of many cultures. Sow seeds direct into well-drained soil with lots of compost and well-rotted manure. Regularly water and liquid feed with seaweed extract for best results. All parts of this plant can be eaten. Harvest leaves and stems from the outside of the plant, add to salads or many cooked dishes. Remove flowers to keep plants growing longer. Let some plants go to seed and harvest the mature brown seeds for cooking curries, pickling and for growing next year’s plants. Fresh roots are also used in cooking and freeze well, although leaves don’t. Can be made into a pest-repellent spray.

Giant purple mustard

Brassica juncea var. rugosa

An easy and quick-growing annual that can be pocket planted to confuse pest insects and to add colour to your patch. Mustards are also soil fumigants, helpful in crop rotation. Young leaves add a wasabi-like taste to salads. Older leaves are best in stir-fries where they lose their heat, becoming slightly bitter and balancing other flavours. Flowers attract bees and beneficial insects and are tasty in salads. Young, green seed pods can be added to salads. These leafy green plants seeds can be used in pickling or to make your own grainy mustard, even if they are not exactly the right species. Plants self-seed easily so you should only need to buy them once.