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I'm currently compiling a list of herbs & spices I don't have and refreshing my existing spices and have come across Epazote. I don't even know how to pronounce it, let alone know what to use it for. The literature I have suggest to use it in a similar manner to oregano.
I see the MG bought some as a live plant (New herbs) and Burt Blank mentions it with a recipe but I note that the recipe itself doesn't contain it (Croatian Army Beans).
So what can I use it for? Is it interchangable with summer or winter savoury. I have the latter growing vigourously in my garden but I'm alway interested in new dishes or way to use things.
Epazote Mexican Herb Leaves
I see the MG bought some as a live plant (New herbs) and Burt Blank mentions it with a recipe but I note that the recipe itself doesn't contain it (Croatian Army Beans).
So what can I use it for? Is it interchangable with summer or winter savoury. I have the latter growing vigourously in my garden but I'm alway interested in new dishes or way to use things.
Epazote Mexican Herb Leaves
Epazote, is a traditional Mexican Herb where the leaves are used in a similar way to oregano.
Other Common Names
American wormseed, goosefoot, Jerusalem parsley, Jesuit's tea, Mexican tea, paico, (formerly known as Chenopodium ambrosioides). Botanical Name: (Dysphania ambrosioides)
Description & Use
Epazote has a pleasant “mixed herbs” flavour, and is a popular ingredient in soups, bean dishes and tacos in the cooking of the Yucatan Peninsula of Mexico. It features in many Mexican recipes, especially tacos and traditional pit roasts.
The third syllable (zoh) rhymes with toe.

Boy, are they going to feel silly.