Shungiku Chrysanthemum Greens Cooking and Applications
Japan (nationwide; spring seasonal peak; widely cultivated across East Asia)
Shungiku (春菊, Glebionis coronaria — crown daisy / garland chrysanthemum) is a leafy green that occupies a unique position in Japanese cooking — its aromatic, slightly bitter, herb-like flavour makes it simultaneously a vegetable, a herb, and a flavour accent. The plant is widely used across East Asian cuisines but has its most refined Japanese applications in nabe (hotpot), where it is added in the final minutes of cooking and barely wilted to preserve its vivid green colour and aromatic character, then eaten with ponzu or sesame sauce. The flavour profile contains notes of chrysanthemum flower, mint, and anise — quite unlike any Western green — and functions as both a flavour contributor and palate cleanser in prolonged hotpot eating. Beyond nabe, shungiku appears in aemono (dressed salads) blanched briefly and dressed with sesame paste or miso-vinegar, in tempura (lightly battered leaves retain their aroma beautifully), and raw in salads where the aromatic intensity is most prominent. The leaves and tender stems are used; thick stems are discarded. In early spring (shun season), the young leaves are most tender and aromatic, hence 'shun' (spring) in the name. Chrysanthemum greens are also associated with Japanese aesthetic culture — the chrysanthemum is the imperial family's crest.