Having grown up eating Rosella jam, it was interesting to grow this annual vegetable or fruit plant again. The leaves are edible so it can be called a vegetable. It is just not quite hot enough to get a huge crop this far south as Rosella is really a tropical annual planted at the beginning of the wet season. Asian food expert Charmaine Solomon gives an interesting recipe for a Burmese sour soup (chin ye hin) in one of her books using the leaves which have a similar sharp tang as French sorrel. The fruit have a high vitamin C content and make great sauces, jams and jellies. Above all though, you have not lived until you have drunk Hibiscus Rum Punch especially after a game of cricket in Jamaica where it is known as Flor de Jamaica .What you have to do is pour boiling water over some fresh rosella combined with a couple of cups of sugar, a few cloves and a cinnamon stick. Allow this to sit for a few days and then add dark rum to taste and allow to brew for a couple more days before straining and serving ice cold.
While on the subject of Rosellas I can't not mention the feathered variety which is a welcome visitor to gardens on the east coast of Australia. If you have a wild bird table a pair will often come to visit and become quite tame. Their distinctive mellow bell like call 'klee-kleekee' is delightful.
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