The species, rarely used by indigenous people as a
leaf vegetable, was first documented by
Captain Cook. It was immediately picked, cooked, and
pickled to help fight
scurvy, and taken with the crew of the
Endeavour. It spread when the explorer and botanist
Joseph Banks took seeds back to
Kew Gardens during the latter half of the 18th century. For two centuries,
T. tetragonioides was the only cultivated vegetable to have originated from Australia and New Zealand. There are some indications that Māori did eat perhaps more regularly. According to Murdoch Riley, "to counteract the bitterness of the older leaves of this herb, the Māori boiled it with the roots of the convolvulus (
pōhue)", in reference to species of
Convolvulaceae now classified as
Calystegia. The tips of the spinach can be pinched off and eaten raw or cooked. ==Nutrition==