Collard greens are a great dinnertime staple, but before you can cook them, you have to clean them. Here's how to clean your collard greens properly.
How To Clean Your Collard Greens
Collard greens are a great dinnertime staple, but before you can cook them, you have to clean them. Here's how to clean your collard greens properly.
While leafy greens deserve a lasting spot in your diet, they are highly susceptible to going bad, seemingly in the blink of an eye.
It can be easy to mix up mustard greens and collard greens. They look similar, and both are commonly used in Southern cuisine (via Epicurious). But there are definitely some differences between the dark, leafy greens.
Though the large leaves and thick stems may seem intimidating, collard greens are quite easy to cook and you'll be even more inspired to whip up a batch once you've mastered making them without any bitterness (via Dining With Debbie).
When the best food holiday of the year is on the horizon, you don't mess around — and neither does Tia Mowry. The "Sister, Sister" actress revealed her secret to mashed potatoes ahead of Thanksgiving (a garlic confit), and the family recipe that fills up a spot on her dining room table.