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Good Garden Question: Can I Eat This Plant?

2008_6_03-Plant.jpgCalling expert Kitchn gardeners - here's one more good question for you. This comes from reader Kristen, who recently showed us her garden. She asks:

I recently moved into an older house on an Army post and I found what appeared to be the remnants of an herb garden. My dad pulled out all of the weedy plants out and tilled the ground before we planted some tomatoes, bell peppers, beans, and herbs. But this plant keeps popping up throughout my little garden patch.

The pictures are of one quick growing plant by my hose. It looks like flat-leaf parsley to me, but I'm not sure. So my questions are: What is this plant? Can I eat it? Should I? Would you?

Thanks,
Kristen

2008_6_03-Plant2.jpgWe want to be careful, Kristen - we do think that this looks like flat-leaf parsley too, but we're not sure. We'd like to get everyone else's opinion.

So - mystery plant! What do you say?

Here, just for reference, is a photo of our very young Italian parsley plant:

2008_6_03-Plant3.jpg

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Good Questions, Gardening, parsley, mystery plant

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Comments (21)

When you snap a leaf and rub it between your fingers, does it smell like parsley?

posted by kwatkins on 2008-06-04 11:41:46
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Take a cutting of leaves and flowers and go to a good nursery. They should be able to tell you what it is or at least who CAN tell you. Eating unidentified plants isn't quite as dangerous as eating unidentified mushrooms, but it's probably not a good idea to risk it.

posted by Tiamat_the_Red on 2008-06-04 11:42:00
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If it's wild parsley or parsnip, be VERY careful - some people (I'm one) have severe skin allergies to those two. I get a seriously itchy and painful poison ivy-type rash that spreads like wildfire if it's exposed to the sun. So I can't imagine that eating those leaves would be good for me. But if you've touched them and been ok afterwards, I guess you're not one of those people!

posted by kat98 on 2008-06-04 11:50:26
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It's flat leaf Italian parsley and it's sending out flowers. Cut them off so the plant continues to put energy into the leaves and not making flowers (seeds).

posted by Sara Kate on 2008-06-04 11:52:27
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Yes, some wild relatives of parsley look similar, so I'd check to be sure.

posted by ValHalla on 2008-06-04 12:04:03
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cilantro

posted by Lenny on 2008-06-04 14:52:18
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You should be very careful in your identification before eating it. Some extremely poisonous plants resemble parsley (eg. hemlock water dropwort).

posted by angorian on 2008-06-04 14:53:19
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The greatest concern would be confusing water or poison hemlock for parsley. The leaves in the photo look like parsley to me, but I would recommend reading up on water/poison hemlock to make sure you know what not to try. Search terms to use: "fool's parsley", "water hemlock", "poison hemlock". A hint: if it kinda stinks when you bruise it, pull it out. Do your own research though, and if you still have nagging doubts, follow Tiamat_the_Red's advice and find someone who can positively identify it.

If that bit was not scary enough, poison/water hemlock are easily the most poisonous plants you are likely to find, and was the poison used on Socrates.

posted by samaritan on 2008-06-04 15:45:13
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I've just bought a house and discovered the same plant (also by my hose). I've taken a leaf and rubbed it between my fingers, and it doesn't smell like parsley, or really anything at all.

posted by practicallydone on 2008-06-04 16:46:18
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My guess would also be parsley, but could it be lovage? Those leaves are usually much larger than parsley leaves.

posted by cara in brooklyn on 2008-06-04 17:46:44
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looks very much like parsley - and it is blooming. check this illustration that also shows the exact same blossoms:
http://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Bild:Illustration_Petroselinum_crispum0.jpg&filetimestamp=20041029175434
rub a leave between your fingers and smell!

posted by wenkexin on 2008-06-04 18:29:58
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I would bet money that is lovage. Lovage smells very similar to celery. It's delicious in salads!

posted by pam222 on 2008-06-04 19:10:59
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I agree with pam222, I would bet money that this is lovage (Levisticum officinale). It's called Maggikraut in Germany because it tastes like Maggi seasoning. Europeans use lovage a lot in soups and sauces.

posted by otherminds on 2008-06-04 20:31:29
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looks exactly like the flat leaf parsley I buy in the store...

posted by monika1 on 2008-06-05 06:02:47
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it's parsley.

posted by suzy on 2008-06-05 08:44:31
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The mystery plant is parsley. The yellow tinge on your baby italian parsley makes me think that it's nutrient deficient.

posted by quercus on 2008-06-05 10:34:10
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I should say, the mystery plant looks like parsley.

posted by quercus on 2008-06-05 10:34:58
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This looks like a Parsley plant that is in its second year. I have the same thing growing in my yard now. Parsley is a biennial, and will go to seed in its second year, then die. You should let it do so, to continue the cycle, and you'll have lots of baby parsley next year!

You can still use it, it's just not as delicate of a flavor. You can also go ahead and plant some this year, and have a rotating crop!

posted by Mary K on 2008-06-05 10:46:27
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Like Mary K says, it looks exactly like my parsley plant that I let grow from last year. I tried using it, but it is so coarse and the flavor is so strong. Mainly the texture was just gross.

posted by brittanykate on 2008-06-05 11:47:22
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Wow, thanks for all of the help. This is Kristen, that's my mystery plant. I took your advice and rubbed the plant between my fingers. It does indeed smell like parsley, quite strongly. (I don't know why I didn't think of this before, probably because I haven't been able to smell for some weeks thanks to allergies.) But I will take a clipping to a local nursery for positive identification- I don't want to end up like Socrates.

posted by chandlertoth on 2008-06-05 13:20:21
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Put on gloves take a leaf and rub in hands smell it, if youar still not sure take some to your local Master Gardner Progam in you city . ....Maj

posted by majeral512 on 2008-06-05 13:21:50
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