Japanese Shungiku Chrysanthemum Greens Season Use and Nutritional Properties
Japan (national; cultivation common across Japan; cooler regions produce highest quality)
Shungiku (春菊 — spring chrysanthemum, Glebionis coronaria) is a leafy green with an assertive, slightly bitter, aromatic flavour profile that provides essential balance in Japanese hot pot (nabe) and simmered dishes. Despite its name suggesting spring, shungiku is available October–March in Japan — a cool-season crop. The flavour is distinctive: the bitterness is softer than radicchio, the aroma carries a chrysanthemum floral note alongside earthy greens, and there is a mild resinous quality from the volatile terpenes in the leaves. Its primary uses: shabu-shabu and sukiyaki (added in the final minutes of cooking, where brief heat wilts the leaves and blooms the aromatics without destroying them), miso soup (added at the last moment for fragrance), goma-ae (sesame-dressed blanched salad), and tempura (whole leaves battered and fried). Nutritionally, shungiku is extraordinarily mineral-dense — high in calcium, iron, and β-carotene, which historically made it valued in temple and medicinal cooking contexts. The classification of shungiku as a cooking green rather than a salad green is cultural — the aromatic bitterness is too assertive for raw Western-style salad use but ideal for the brief heat applications in Japanese cooking.