Corn-salad
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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture |
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Valerianella olitoria, Moench. Corn Salad. Lamb's Lettuce. Fetticus. Fig. 3897. An "autumnal annual" herb, the seed of which ripens in April or May, soon falls to the ground, and germinates in Aug. The plant makes its growth in the fall and flowers the following spring. In cult. the seed is generally sown in early spring or late summer. The plant forms a dense rosette of spoon-shaped lvs. which grow in a decussate fashion, and has an angular forking st. bearing small bluish white fls. in terminal clusters. Eu., Orient.—The Round-leaved variety has much shorter lvs. than the common type and they are half-erect instead of spreading, and less prominently veined. This kind is the one grown almost exclusively for the Paris market. The large-seeded variety is more robust than the common type and the seed is nearly twice as large: lvs. marked with numerous secondary veins. Much grown in Holland and Germany. The Etampes variety has very dark-colored lvs., which are often undulate or folded back at the margins; lvs. narrow, prominently veined, thicker and more fleshy than the other kinds and specially suited to cold weather and long-distance shipment. The cabbaging variety differs from the others in forming a heart or head of fine flavor. Unfortunately it is the least productive type, but it bears shipment well if properly grown.
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Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture |
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Corn-salad (Valerianella olitoria. Poll.). Valerianaceae. A spring and summer salad and pot-herb plant. Annual: mature plant 4-6 in. tall, forking: radical lvs. tufted (the parts used), oblong and obtuse, narrowed at the base, entire or few-toothed; st.-lvs. narrow, often clasping: fls. very small, in small terminal cymes, whitish: fr. (seed) nearly globular, gray, not crested. S. Eu. V. eriocarpa, Desv., of S. Eu. and N. Afr., is sometimes cult, as salad: lvs. longer and lighter-colored: fr. (seed) flattened, pale brown, crested. Known also as lamb's lettuce, fetticus, and vetticost. Sow the seed of corn-salad in early spring, at the time of the first sowing of lettuce, and make successional plantings as often as desired. For very early salads the seeds are planted in September, and the young plants are covered with a light mulch and wintered exactly as spinach is often managed. Sow in drills a foot or 18 inches apart and cover lightly. Work the ground thoroughly, and give an abundance of water. The leaves may be blanched, but are usually eaten green. It matures in sixty to sixty-five days during good spring weather. Only one variety is offered by most American seedsmen, but several sorts are known to European gardeners. It is sometimes used for a pot-herb, being served like spinach, but is chiefly valuable for salads. It is rather tasteless, and is not so popular as cress or lettuce on that account, but persons who prefer a very mijd salad, or who would rather taste the salad dressing, will doubtless fancy corn-salad. It is best served in mixture with other herbs, as lettuce, water-cress or white mustard. It is easy to grow. There are no special enemies. F.A. Waugh.
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References
- Standard Cyclopedia of Horticulture, by L. H. Bailey, MacMillan Co., 1963
External links
- w:Corn-salad. Some of the material on this page may be from Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons license.
- Corn-salad QR Code (Size 50, 100, 200, 500)