Archive for the ‘seeds’ Category

satisfying sprouts

April 28th, 2010

We have been enjoying the process (and taste!) of growing sprouts at our house. We are all amazed at how quickly changes happen with our plant babies, and my babies love to devour our tender greens. We have been growing 4 trays, and find that it just about gives us a week’s worth of yum until our next trays come on board. We’re still refining the process, as the peas grow faster at first, though the buckwheat catches up pretty quickly, and sunflowers lag behind. Next week I’ll try staggering their starts, but for now I’m still starting the soak at the same time.

I snapped a shot of all four of the trays that we showed the planting process so that you can see what they looked like when we took the covers off. In retrospect, I would have left the covers on the sunflower a little longer, as these sleepy sprouts took a long time to cast off their little black caps and come out to play in the sunshine. But even so, they managed nicely and are now ready for the table.

First up, we have the buckwheat.

You can see the yellowish color, no green since I’d just taken the lid off and they’d been in total darkness until now. You can also see the white fuzzy roots that are often mistaken for mold — I had read about this, so while I watched it carefully, I was not quick to give up on them, and as it turns out, the book was right! These are just the tiny hairs on the roots, and not some nasty fungus that doomed my little crop.

They greened up pretty quickly, but I didn’t snap a picture until a few days later, when most of them had cast off their seed hull of their own accord and peeked out over the sides of the tray.

I love the way this picture shows our buckwheat babies emerging from the sunlight in their sunny southern window. This reminds me of something I read once about plants, about eating plants is like eating sunlight. I still am agog at the fact that plants convert sunlight into tangible energy. Just think what we could do for our energy crisis if we could figure that one out! Anyway, what I’d come across was something to the effect of that:  plants covert sunlight into plant matter, so by eating raw, unadulterated plants we are in a way eating sunlight.  Now back to our regularly scheduled program…

The other two seeds we’d started that day were sunflower and peas — here they are the day I took the cover off:

Sunflowers on the left, probably could have used another day or so in the dark. Peas on the right have 2 inch or so shoots that are ready to green up. Lucia pointed out that the pea shoots grow up out of the pea, which stays on the soil surface. The buckwheat and sunflowers grow different, carrying their seed coats up with them  until the shoot is strong enough to cast them off.

Here’s a shot of the pea shoots one day after the above pic — look how much greener and taller:

I haven’t captured a “final stage” pic of the sprouts yet, guess I’m too busy eating them! But you can get a sense of what the pea and sunflower sprouts look like in our dinner from last night. We’ve talked about incorporating more raw foods into your diet by just adding one meal a day (usually starting with breakfast, choosing a smoothie or fruit instead of bagel or cereal), then two, and then having more raw food as sides at dinner. Last night’s dinner is a good example of this. I was trying out some relatively new dishes, so I defrosted some lentil soup and heated that up, knowing that Dante and Lucia would at the very least eat that.

So I got out some collards, destemmed and cut them in half, and whipped up some tangy carrot salad, or a variation thereof.  This has been a favorite recently — it’s quick to come together and can be made from stuff I usually have on hand, leaving out what I don’t and adding in what I do. I chop the nuts and leave them separate so that they aren’t soggy in the leftovers. I put these out as a little craft project at the dinner table — and Dante at a whole carrot-salad-filled collard wrap as part of his dinner. The first few times I made this salad, he ate a bite and said he didn’t like it. Granted, each time I’ve made it I’ve had different things on hand, but this time he ate it. So there’s something to be said for continuing to serve things and waiting for appreciation to come after many tries.

I’d made the cream sauce for the sprouts before I shredded the carrots in the food processor, and since Lucia wanted to try the sauce I gave her a bowl of carrot shreds with some sauce drizzled on it. I added an extra clove of garlic to the sauce (who’s surprised? anyone? anyone?) so it was packin some heat, but both she and her brother ended up eating a small bowl of this as part of their dinner.

And in addition to carrot wraps and lentil soup, I served a big bed of pea and sunflower sprouts with velvety smooth cream sauce. Oh my. It was delicious! Lucia at first asked for a bowl of plain sprouts, but after finishing her carrots, she asked for cream sauce on them as well. And in fact, I just drizzled some on since I knew she found the sauce to be spicy, and she demanded more — nearly double! I loved the texture and flavor of this dish, but we all agreed that we felt slightly rabbit-like, sucking a forkful of sprouts in as we chewed, so next time I will probably chop the sprouts up a bit before serving, or serve them with a knife so people can chop their own.

Can’t rave enough about the sprouts — and they’re soo kid-friendly too on many levels. Definitely consider giving them a try so that by next winter you’re comfortable with the process and are ready to have fresh, local greens all winter long!

Happy sprouting!

seeds n sprouts

April 15th, 2010

top down view of buckwheat lettuceIt’s been a while since our field trip to Aiki Farms, but I couldn’t get the sprouts out of my mind. I have been doing jar sprouting of mung beans, peas, lentils, broccoli and alfalfa, but never really gave the process of growing leafy shoots more than a half-hearted try. So I bought some sprouting buckwheat seeds at Garden of Light natural food store in Glastonbury, got out some of the mesclun and spinach containers I’d been saving, and went to town. And ya know what? It was really easy, and the kids LOVED gobbling up the sprouts! We served them atop your standard green salad, by themselves dressed with a dash of balsamic vinegar, in a romaine leaf that was smeared with cashew mayonnaise and rolled up in nori or rice wrappers with shredded carrots, tomato, avocado and EZ Nori Filling or a sweet chili or peanut dipping sauce. I also imagine they’d be a great way to get greens into smoothies without a strong “green” taste!

sprouts on a saladWhy sprout?

  1. Nutrition — sprouts have a greater concentration of vitamins, minerals, protein and phytochemicals than any other period in the plants life — even full grown fruit or vegetables.
  2. Price — pound for pound, sprouts cost less than most other produce (the sproutman calculates them to be on average 26 cents per pound!)
  3. Local and fresh — sprouts stop growing the moment you cut or chew them, and it doesn’t get much more local than that! And nutrients are intact instead of dissipating slowly as produce sits on the store shelves
  4. Organic — no chemicals needed, neither pesticide or fertilizers. Invest in a good organic soil mix (this will pay off in the amount of nutrients your sprouts contain) or mix your own. Aiki Farms uses a mixture of peat moss and composted chicken manure. Find a local organic farmer in your area to see if they can hook you up or know of a good source. What do they use for seed starting?
  5. Easy to digest — The tender cell walls of these baby plants break down more easily than the tougher walls of their mature counterparts, and they contain a higher concentration of enzymes that help break them down, so your system doesn’t have to work as hard.
  6. Easy to grow — growing shoots does require a bit more space, but still not nearly work or space as outdoor gardening. Sprouting lentils, mung beans, etc in a jar takes even less time and space — a minute or two a day to rinse, and whatever space your jar or nut milk bag requires.
  7. Year-round harvest — you can grow sprouts no matter what the temperature is inside or out, ditto the available sunlight. Sprouting may take longer in one season than another, but you can adjust your process and schedule accordingly.  And your jar or nut milk bag is portable, making sprouts an easy travel food — take it with you when visiting family or on camping trips!
  8. Taste — how could I list this last?! Shoots have a very mild taste compared to kale and other dark leafy greens and kids LOVE them! They add a nice, succulent texture to your meals, and the sprouted legumes add a nice crunch to your salads.

Back to technique. I punctured the bottom of the container, placed it on the lid to catch extra water, and spread about 1 inch of soil inside. I watered it with my spray bottle, but that took more time than it was worth and I would probably line them up outside and use the hose with a light spray instead. Once the soil was wet, I sprinkled the seeds on and tried to spread them out evenly.

Not having enough empty cupboard space, I moved them to our laundry room and put them underneath a cardboard box (the tall, awkward shape of the salad container also meant that covering it wasn’t easy. I lifted the box each day to let in a whoosh of fresh air (I was worried about air circulation) and check the progress. After 4 days or so, the shoots were about 2 inches tall, so I brought them into a sunny south window. They greened up really quickly and were ready to harvest a couple of days after exposure to the sun.

Look how green they are! They kept catching my eye as I walked past the room they were in, with their vibrant green glow.  I tried cutting them with scissors, but found it easier to hold the tops of the clump I wanted and cut them free with a short paring knife. I didn’t wash them — they didn’t have any dirt clinging to them or anything, and since you’re leaving the bottom of the stems and the roots in the soil, they’re clean. One thing I’m hoping resolves itself with our new method is the hulls that stay stuck on. My sense is that I hadn’t watered the trays enough or that the covering allowed for them to dry out quicker, so there wasn’t enough moisture and the hulls dried out. Thus hardened, it was more difficult for the plant to shed the hull. We’ll see how it goes in round 2.

The tall sides of the containers made harvesting a bit awkward, so I decided to go out and get some seed-starting tray bottoms at Paul and Sandy’s in East Hampton. They were 1.29 each, and for each tray of sprouts I wanted, I needed 3 of the trays — one on the bottom to catch the water, one punctured and filled with soil and put inside the bottom tray, and one tray to cover the sprouts for the first few days after planting until they are ready for sunlight.

To get ready to put the seeds in soil, I had to soak and then sprout them. I ordered sprouting seeds from sproutman.com, because all I have read on the matter suggests that sprouting seeds are selected for their high germination rate and taste of shoots produced. I measured out what I thought might work (about a cup) and put them on a white kitchen towel to see if there were any stones, twigs, or funky looking seeds. My sprouting bible, The Sprout Garden, says that the Five D’s — Decayed, Diseased, Discolored, Dented and Dwarfed equal DEAD seeds.

After culling (didn’t actually have anything to cull in this batch) and soaked them overnight for about 12 hours. I drained and rinsed the seeds, and then let them sprout for a little over 24 hours, rinsing them 2-3 times a day. The buckwheat and sunflower seeds would start looking dried out before the peas, but I rinsed them all at the same time anyway. Once the seeds were showing evidence of the start of a tail , I gathered my supplies and headed to the deck. The buckwheat was barely showing a tiny sprout, many weren’t but I planted them anyway since I’d read that if you wait too long, it won’t be able to re-orient itself and get a good root into the soil.

punctured seed trayWith a paring knife, I punctured holes in the bottom of 4 of the trays so that water could drain out. I put these inside intact trays, and filled them with about an inch of soil — definitely harder to judge with opaque containers, but I will get to the point that I know how many scoops of dirt are needed per tray so that I don’t waste soil.

Dante presses the soilOnce the soil was in, we put the tops on and used it to press the soil down a bit, again, going on the process we learned at Aiki Farms. We brought the trays onto the lawn and sprayed them with a hose until they were shiny on the surface for a second or two after the hose was pointed elsewhere. We let them sit for a few minutes to drain out an excess water and brought them back up to the deck and added the seeds.

The kids head realized what was going on,  helped with the soil and the watering and were now clamoring once again to do the seeds. So Lucia took the jar of peas and spread them out in one tray. She tried sprinkling them out of the jar evenly, but got frustrated and ended up dumping them all in the middle and spreading them from there.

Lulu plants some peas

We did the same for the sunflower and buckwheat sprouts, filling 3 more trays.

4 trays planted with sprouts!

Now we used our last intact trays as a cover, guarded by a little elf:

covered sprout trays

And brought them into the the house on a table in the playroom:

final resting place of sprout trays

I put a large piece of plastic-ish stuff on the table to protect it in case some water got on it, but will probably figure out a better place for them, since we do like to use that table for crafts and the like.

The whole process took about a half hour, but I had to puncture the trays and take time for kids and pictures, so I expect I will be able to do this in about 10 minutes. Bob from Aiki Farms suggested that 4 trays would make enough sprouts to feed a family of 4 for one week.

I’ll re-post when the covers come off!

labels in a can

March 16th, 2010

Today we’re heading back to the garden for some more seed-starting ideas. Specifically, making plant labels from aluminum cans. Recycling AND making something you can reuse again and again. Perfect!

It was harder than I expected to lop off the top and bottom of the can with scissors, so I used the tin snips to make it a little easier. Perhaps your scissors would be up to the task, but alas, not so mine.

snippin cans

Cutting a ring around the top, then straight down one side of the can and another ring around the bottom left some rough edges, which I was easily able to trim off with my lame-ish scissors.

 rolled and ready to go

The metal was still fairly curled, holding fast to memories of its previous incarnation as a can, so I rolled them the other way and had rubber bands hold them this way for 20 minutes or so. Not a necessary step, but this did make it easier for me to do the rest of the cutting, etc. Once I unrolled one, I folded it in half, making two 4-inch long pieces of metal, which I then cut into four 4-inch by almost 1-inch wide strips.

strip!

Since the kids help with these, I trimmed most of the top edges into a rounded shape. But you can see that I experimented with alternatives to this as well. I also folded the opposite end as you would starting some paper airplane folds to make a pointed, reinforced edge to stick into the soil.

The last step is writing in the plant names. I did it both ways, with the “Tomato ‘Sioux’ ” sample being written directly on the silver side of the marker. I also tried the alternative (says “Tomato ’sweet pea’ ” which, for me, involved writing the words backwards on a piece of paper, and then copying the backwards letters onto the printed side of the can. This gives an embossed appearance to the letters. After doing a few and getting my brain into the backwards letter mode, I didn’t have to write them out on paper first, but it did take a few attempts before I was in the ‘zone’.

tomatoes!

I can’t say I do this for seed starting, I like my popsicle sticks with a sharpie jes’ fine for the many labels I need. But I would consider labeling the many new herbs we’ve decided to grow this year with these more weatherproof markers. I probably won’t limit myself to the small, utilitarian labels above, but make bigger labels with some decorative touches like scrollwork, etc. as well.

I found details for this idea at little house in the suburbs, and I love the herb label they ended with and plan to make something along these lines for our own until we’re more familiar with them and can identify them in the blink of an eye.

rosemary label

Newspaper seedling pots

March 10th, 2010

Well, the new moon is on March 15, so we’re in a big rush this week to get our newspaper pots up and running by then. We’re experimenting with various garden techniques this year, and lunar gardening is one of them. I read some interesting info, having noticed that the Farmer’s Almanac includes “planting by the moon” information on their calendar. Many studies have been done to validate the folk observations of the effects of the moon on plant growth, and I figure I could use all the help I can get growing more of our food and herbs. I found several books on the subject via ILL at the library, and a website called gardeningbythemoon.com.

Last year we made newspaper pots to house our seedlings until they were ready for the garden. Definitely more time consuming than buying seed trays, but you can plant the entire thing in the ground making transplanting much less traumatic. And I imagine the newspaper disintegrates faster than peat pots since it’s so much thinner. Plus we’re keeping materials out of the waste stream rather than purchasing a single-use piece of plastic, with all the environmental burden that carries, or the peat pots, another non-renewable resource. Needless to say, it eliminates the need to sterilize seedling pots, a task I detest.  AND we have well-read seedlings, up on the latest town politics. Either way, it’s a win-win, n’est-ce pas?

So, first step. I took the local paper that comes each Friday (smaller than a NYT type paper, so if you’ve got one like that you might have to adjust or use a bigger form), opened it and cut along the center crease. Then I turned it 90 degrees and cut along the fold. Lucia took some shots to illustrate.

I now had what I needed to make one pot. I turned it so the shorter side was near my stomach, and folded that up about 1.5 inches. After creasing that fold, I brought the opposite short edge under the one I’d previously folded, not coming all the way to the fold, but perhaps a half inch or so back from it.

Next, with the smaller fold folded over the bottom fold, and keeping this thinner fold toward the top of the jar, I wrapped it, folds inside, around the jar, leaving a little less than half the newspaper hanging off the bottom of the jar. Can I say fold a few more times and confuse you? Fold down the larger fold, fold the shorter fold over it, keep that nearest the top of the jar. Phew!

newspaper pot step 2

Turning the jar on it’s lid, I folded the newspaper down to cover the bottom. For these small jars (Bionaturae glass jars, though cans work as well, just give a bigger pot), I had to fold it down in 3 sections.

newspaper pot step 3

Done folding down the bottom, I turned it over and slid the jar out. Now it’s time to tuck the part of the top that wraps around into the slit created by the first fold.

newspaper pot step 4

You need to keep pushing down at the same time to keep the bottom folds from popping up and destroying the pot. I found that it took a couple of tries to get the hang of it and then it was pretty easy.

newspaper pot step 5

Voila! Ready to fill with potting soil and put in the container. Definitely fill it as soon as you fold it, because I didn’t and half of them came undone when I picked them up to fill a while later.

newspaper pot step 6

Ready for seeds.

newspaper pots ready for seeds

Seeds! Seeds! Seeds!

February 1st, 2010

It’s that time of year again here in the Northeast. The holiday whirl has subsided, we’ve had a month for quiet reflection and a string of family game marathons. We’ve peeked into our nooks and crannies and donated the things that don’t fit. Well, we’re still working on that last one, actually. It’s tough for a family of packrats to let things go easily.

The spring-like weather of the past week has gotten us thinking about what new plants we’ll try to grow this year. Some of our seed catalogs arrived back in December, when we didn’t have time to pore over the rainbow within. Today, now that the bitter weather has snapped back into place, we’re happy to snuggle up inside and do just that. I ordered online last year from several of these companies, but it’s lovely to have a paper catalog to leaf through.

gardening when it countsLast year, I stumbled on an interesting book called “Gardening When It Counts: Growing Food in Hard Times” by Steve Solomon. As a previous owner of a seed company himself, he offered some ‘insider’ information about the quality of seeds offered for the retail market, and how to ensure that you get quality seeds. The bottom line is that, for the best results, you want to be sure that you buy from reputable companies. He recommended several, and I’ve parsed that list to include companies that sell seeds which thrive in the New England area, as well as those with a strong committment to sustainable agriculture and a non-GMO approach.

Baker’s Creek Heirloom Seeds offers open-pollinated heirloom varieties, presenting a collection of unusual, colorful and flavorful varities from around the world.

Seed Savers Exchange a non-profit, member supported organization that saves and shares heirloom seeds — more than 25,000 endangered vegetable varieties, most having been brought to North America by members’ ancestors who immigrated from Europe, the Middle East, Asia and other parts of the world. SSE is the largest non-governmental seed bank in the United States

Seeds of Change offering 100% certified organic flower, vegetable and herb seeds, many heirloom, native and hard-to-find varieties

Johnny’s Selected Seeds is an employee-owned seed producer in Maine selling heirloom and hybrid vegetable seeds; medicinal and culinary herb seeds; flower seeds; cover crops, farm seed, and pasture mixes; fruit plants and seeds, and high quality, problem-solving tools and supplies for both the home gardener and larger customers. The opportunity to purchase in bulk abounds in this catalog.

Richters Herbs offers a wide variety of culinary and medicinal herb seeds, plants, extracts and herb-related products. If you need an obscure herb, this is your source. Last year was my first ordering from them, and I’m excited to see how my “leftover” seed germination rates are this year. They also offer bulk packaging.