All species in the genus Malva have edible leaves, and
these tend to have a mild flavour and a good texture. We use them
extensively, finding them greatly superior to lettuce as the bulk
ingredient of a mixed salad.
One of the nicest members of the genus that we use is our native musk
mallow, Malva moschata. A very easily grown plant, it will
succeed in most soils though it prefers a reasonably well-drained and
moderately fertile soil in a sunny position. In the wild it is found in
fairly open and sunny habitats such as grassy places, pastures,
hedgebanks and the sides of roads, especially on rich soils and avoiding
acid soils. If you have a wildflower meadow for summer flowering plants
then you have an ideal place to grow the mallow. It is a very hardy
plant and will tolerate temperatures down to about -25°c when it is
dormant in the winter.
The musk mallow is a very ornamental plant, especially when it is in
flower in the summer. The wild form has pink flowers but there are also
forms with white petals. If you cut the plant back to the ground when
the flowering is almost over in the summer then you will generally be
rewarded with a fresh flush of flowers in late summer.
The leaves are also quite attractive - the first leaves the plant
produces in spring are entire but later leaves are very different with a
high degree of laciniation. Individual plants are generally quite
short-lived though they can self-sow freely when in a suitable position
and usually more than maintain themselves.
We have found the plants to be fairly immune to predation - slugs
seldom bother to eat it and rabbits also tend to leave it alone.
However, it does have a strong tendency to get rust - little red
pustules of a fungus that grows on the leaves.
The musk mallow is one of our main salad plants from mid spring to
mid summer. The leaves have a very mild flavour and very little fibre -
they make an excellent bulk ingredient of salads. The texture might seem
a bit strange to people who are unused to it, there is a distinct
gummyness and this becomes an unpleasant sliminess if the leaves are
cooked. However, I have hardy met anyone who finds the gummyness of the
raw leaf unpleasant, indeed this gummyness is a positive attribute of
the plant since it acts as a very effective balancer to the digestive
system. If you have diarrhoea then the mallow leaves will soothe the
digestive tract and help to stop the diarrhoea. If you are constipated
then the leaves will provide the bulk that will bring about normal
motions. In addition eating the leaves also helps to soothe a dry throat
and chesty coughs. Established plants can be harvested quite severely
and this will tend to delay their flowering, thus extending their period
of use in salads. Eventually the plants will insist on flowering and
then we simply move from eating the leaves to eating the flowers. These
have a similar mild flavour and slightly gummy texture with a delicate
sweetness.
The musk mallow is very easy to propagate by seed and, as I said
earlier, it will normally self-sow in the garden. We sow the seed in
trays in a cold frame in early spring and only just cover it in compost.
The seed germinates quickly and easily. Prick out the seedlings into
individual pots when they are large enough to handle and plant them out
in their permanent positions in the early summer. You can also increase
plants by taking basal shoots in late spring - you harvest the young
shoots with plenty of underground stem when they are about 8 - 10cm
above the ground. Pot them up into individual pots and keep them in
light shade in a cold frame or greenhouse until they are rooting well
and plant them out in the summer.
Database
The database has more details on these plants:
Malva moschata.
Readers Comments
Malva moschata
elle
Mon Nov 27 2006
I've found the taste of the leaves fairly indifferent although not unpleasant, and have only added them to salads as an extra, never the main event. Still, M. moschata has to be one of the loveliest British wildflowers.
Malva moschata
Rachel A. Garner
Tue Jul 24 2007
I've an inundation in my yard of something that may be some kind of malva, but I've not been able to pin it down. I would like to ID it sufficiently to use it as a salad green.
It is short stemmed and is blanketing most of my large back yard----making an ideal cover-crop. In the spring it had tiny blue flowers. It made a very pretty sea of blue. The leaf resembles the drawing of a salad-green type of malva displayed in one of my weed-eating books. The closest I can come for leaf shape is a somewhat rounded, kidney-shape, or miniature lily pad with five or six rounded protrusions or scallops on the edges. It was listed as a nutritious, wayside weed . It is fairly moist here in Missouri. We don't get much of a winter and this weed is prolific. Does the weed, malva, grow profusely in this state? Do you have a picture of the leaf of the short variety resembling what I've described?
Rachel Garner
417 935 5552
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