Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Convince me that they're grown in any sort of responsible and/or sustainable way. Then we'll talk.
Stick to your organic kale.
Same. I love Chinese vegetables but I have a feeling they’re doused with chemicals.
Because they are “Chinese”? What kind of absurd statement is that?
Looks like some of us are educated about air and water quality in China, and the overall state of environmental policies in China, and some are not. -NP
The level of casual racism on DCUM by supposedly educated liberals continues to astound me. Most “chinese” vegetables sold at Hmart are grown in California, not China. Think about it for 2 seconds - greens can’t be shipped on container ships. Do you really think HMart is air-freighting bok choy from China to sell you at $2/bunch? On the other hand, a lot of your “organic” produce you find in non-asian grocery stores, especially hardier items and frozen items, are imported from China. Take some lessons on critical thinking and come back when you can do better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe it's circumstantial, but I don't like any preparation of these vegetables I've ever tried, especially book chop. Slimy, salty sauces and over cooked bok choy do not appeal. And I've eaten at "the best authentic" in San Francisco, New York, etc.
This is just one preparation, and it is NOT common in many parts of China--I grew up eating my grandmother's Chinese cooking and we had greens quite often cooked in a variety of ways but NEVER had "slimy, salty sauce" poured over a plate of cooked vegetables. (It's like saying you hate potatoes because you hate one very specific preparation of it).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most fruit and veg we get are factory farmed meaning we get lots of the same kind of thing. It’s how we ended up with the awful Red Delicious apple and the bananas that are being made extinct by a particular banana disease. There’s money in economy of scale; not in producing diverse forms of produce.
wait ... is it good to get "Chinese vegetables" from HMart because they are diverse, or is it bad because they are from China and full of pesticides? Confused ...
Anonymous wrote:Most fruit and veg we get are factory farmed meaning we get lots of the same kind of thing. It’s how we ended up with the awful Red Delicious apple and the bananas that are being made extinct by a particular banana disease. There’s money in economy of scale; not in producing diverse forms of produce.
Anonymous wrote:Those of you who like Malabar spinach - how do you prepare it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there any chance that some of the greens and other veggies sold at Hmart are grown in the US? I just spent a few minutes trying to figure out where HMart sources its vegetables but was unsuccessful.
Yes, many of the greens are grown here.
How do you know? Is it marked?
Anonymous wrote:Is there any chance that some of the greens and other veggies sold at Hmart are grown in the US? I just spent a few minutes trying to figure out where HMart sources its vegetables but was unsuccessful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Convince me that they're grown in any sort of responsible and/or sustainable way. Then we'll talk.
Stick to your organic kale.
Same. I love Chinese vegetables but I have a feeling they’re doused with chemicals.
Because they are “Chinese”? What kind of absurd statement is that?
Looks like some of us are educated about air and water quality in China, and the overall state of environmental policies in China, and some are not. -NP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love them but only if I know they haven’t been grown conventionally.
I don’t buy most vegetables at Hmart for the same reason I don’t buy most of the meat there - it’s all factory/hormone/pesticide produced.
For the record, it’s not a race thing. I also don’t buy conventional items at Safeway.