Southeastern China
Year-round leafy vegetables and Cantonese-cuisine staples
Southeastern China — particularly Guangdong, Fujian, and southern coastal provinces — produces the broad palette of leafy vegetables central to Cantonese and Southern Chinese cuisine, year-round in the subtropical climate.
About southeastern
Southeastern China — particularly Guangdong, Fujian, and southern coastal provinces — produces the broad palette of leafy vegetables central to Cantonese and Southern Chinese cuisine, year-round in the subtropical climate. Bok choy, choi sum, gai lan (Chinese broccoli), yu choy, Chinese spinach (yin choy), water spinach (ong choy/kangkung), Chinese mustard greens (gai choy), and many regional leafy specialties anchor home cooking and restaurant kitchens across the region. The vegetables are typically harvested young and small (rather than the larger mature heads favored in Western leafy greens), with rapid stir-fry preparation being the cultural default. The producer landscape is densely populated with smaller-scale operations supplying both local markets and the export trade to overseas Chinese communities worldwide. Year-round growing in the subtropical climate enables continuous production rotations and constant fresh supply. The bok choy varieties — Shanghai bok choy (smaller, pale green), regular bok choy (larger, white-stemmed), baby bok choy — and the related Chinese cabbage palette are dramatically more diverse than the bok choy options in Western retail typically convey. Exports to global Chinese diaspora communities — Sydney's Cabramatta, San Francisco's Sunset District, Vancouver's Richmond, London's Chinatown — distribute regional cultivars internationally.
Origin profile
Varieties from Southeastern China
5 varieties associated with this origin. Tap any variety for its full editorial profile.
Editorial notes
The Chinese leafy green palette in a quality Asian supermarket dramatically exceeds what's available in typical Western supermarkets — even chains with 'international' produce sections. Visiting a Chinese grocery in a city with a substantial diaspora community reveals 6-10 distinct leafy green types where the mainstream supermarket might carry one (bok choy, maybe baby bok choy). The cultivar diversity is one of the easier upgrades available to home cooks seeking to expand vegetable repertoire — these greens cook quickly, store reasonably well, and bring distinct flavors that the broad American grocery doesn't supply.