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HARVEST TO TABLE
At Harvest to Table I offer easy solutions to common garden problems, helping you bring great food from your garden to your table all yearround.
HAND POLLINATION OF VEGETABLES Hand pollination is the manual transfer of pollen from the stamen of one plant to the pistil of another–that is from a male flower to a female flower. Members of the Cucurbit family–squash, melons, pumpkins, and cucumbers–often have pollination problems because the male flowers commonly open days before the female flowers and so often HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST SHISO Soil preparation: Plant shiso in compost-rich, well-drained soil. Shiso prefers a soil pH of 5.5 to 6.5. Shiso will grow in average soil. Seed starting indoors: Sow seed indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last spring frost. Seeds will germinate in 7 to 21 days at 70°F. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST HYSSOP Soil preparation: Plant hyssop in compost-rich, well-drained soil. Add aged compost or commercial organic planting mix to planting area ahead of planting. Hyssop grows best in a soil pH of 7.0 to 8.0—slightly alkaline. Seed starting indoors: Sow hyssop seed indoors in early spring just a week or so before the last frost. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST STEVIA How to Plant Stevia. Best location: Grow stevia in full sun; in hot dry regions grow stevia in dappled sunlight. Soil preparation: Grow stevia in a well-drained, loamy soil. Add aged compost to the planting bed and turn it under before planting. Stevia grows best when soil pH ranges from 6.7 to 7.2. SQUASH GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Moths lay eggs on squash plants. Caterpillars feed on leaves and inside vines and fruits. Pupae may be found inside rolled leaves. Exclude moths with floating row covers. Plant fast-maturing varieties to promote strong growth before pickleworms attack. Plant a few squash as trap crops. Keep garden clean. RADISH GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Radish Growing Problems and Solutions: • Roots fail to form. Seed are sown too thickly. Thin radishes early and harvest roots as soon as they are large enough to eat. Thin seedlings to 1½ to 2 inches apart. • Seeds rot or seedlings collapse with dark water-soaked stems as soon as they appear.HOW TO CAN TOMATOES
Raw pack: Heat tomato juice in a saucepan. Fill jars with raw peeled tomatoes, pressing to fill spaces with juice. Cover the tomatoes with hot tomato juices, leaving ½ inch headspace. Hot pack: Put tomatoes in a large saucepan and add enough tomato juice to completely cover them. Simmer or gently boil the tomatoes and juice for 5 minutes. CANNING SWEET PICKLE RELISH Combine the vegetables in a large bowl, a 5 or 6 quart saucepan. Sprinkle with pickling salt and stir to mix. Add cold water to cover. Let the vegetables stand covered at room temperature for 2 hours (longer if you like). Drain the vegetable mixture in a HOW TO GROW LEEKS YEAR ROUND IN TUBES Avoid sprinkling soil over the tops of plants; soil that falls into the space between leaves will be trapped. If you plant leeks in trenches, gently push the soil in around the stems and firm it in place as the plant grows. Fill soil in around leeks gradually as they develop. Don’t brush soil on the leafstalks.HARVEST TO TABLE
At Harvest to Table I offer easy solutions to common garden problems, helping you bring great food from your garden to your table all yearround.
HAND POLLINATION OF VEGETABLES Hand pollination is the manual transfer of pollen from the stamen of one plant to the pistil of another–that is from a male flower to a female flower. Members of the Cucurbit family–squash, melons, pumpkins, and cucumbers–often have pollination problems because the male flowers commonly open days before the female flowers and so often HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST SHISO Soil preparation: Plant shiso in compost-rich, well-drained soil. Shiso prefers a soil pH of 5.5 to 6.5. Shiso will grow in average soil. Seed starting indoors: Sow seed indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last spring frost. Seeds will germinate in 7 to 21 days at 70°F. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST HYSSOP Soil preparation: Plant hyssop in compost-rich, well-drained soil. Add aged compost or commercial organic planting mix to planting area ahead of planting. Hyssop grows best in a soil pH of 7.0 to 8.0—slightly alkaline. Seed starting indoors: Sow hyssop seed indoors in early spring just a week or so before the last frost. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST STEVIA How to Plant Stevia. Best location: Grow stevia in full sun; in hot dry regions grow stevia in dappled sunlight. Soil preparation: Grow stevia in a well-drained, loamy soil. Add aged compost to the planting bed and turn it under before planting. Stevia grows best when soil pH ranges from 6.7 to 7.2. SQUASH GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Moths lay eggs on squash plants. Caterpillars feed on leaves and inside vines and fruits. Pupae may be found inside rolled leaves. Exclude moths with floating row covers. Plant fast-maturing varieties to promote strong growth before pickleworms attack. Plant a few squash as trap crops. Keep garden clean. RADISH GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Radish Growing Problems and Solutions: • Roots fail to form. Seed are sown too thickly. Thin radishes early and harvest roots as soon as they are large enough to eat. Thin seedlings to 1½ to 2 inches apart. • Seeds rot or seedlings collapse with dark water-soaked stems as soon as they appear.HOW TO CAN TOMATOES
Raw pack: Heat tomato juice in a saucepan. Fill jars with raw peeled tomatoes, pressing to fill spaces with juice. Cover the tomatoes with hot tomato juices, leaving ½ inch headspace. Hot pack: Put tomatoes in a large saucepan and add enough tomato juice to completely cover them. Simmer or gently boil the tomatoes and juice for 5 minutes. CANNING SWEET PICKLE RELISH Combine the vegetables in a large bowl, a 5 or 6 quart saucepan. Sprinkle with pickling salt and stir to mix. Add cold water to cover. Let the vegetables stand covered at room temperature for 2 hours (longer if you like). Drain the vegetable mixture in a HOW TO GROW LEEKS YEAR ROUND IN TUBES Avoid sprinkling soil over the tops of plants; soil that falls into the space between leaves will be trapped. If you plant leeks in trenches, gently push the soil in around the stems and firm it in place as the plant grows. Fill soil in around leeks gradually as they develop. Don’t brush soil on the leafstalks.HARVEST TO TABLE
At Harvest to Table I offer easy solutions to common garden problems, helping you bring great food from your garden to your table all yearround.
HOW TO HARVEST AND STORE COLLARDS How to Harvest Collards. Harvest leaves from low on the stem first and work your way up the stalk. Pick leaves from the outside of the plant and work inward. Be careful not to damage the stem where new leaves emerge. Leaves will come away from the stem with a sharp downward pull. You can also use a sharp knife. EPSOM SALT, TOMATO, AND PEPPER GROWING Epsom salt used as a foliar spray or soil additive will help tomato and pepper plants grow and produce larger, tastier yields. Late in the season use an Epsom salt spray to increase tomato and pepper yield and keep plants green and bushy; early in the season add Epsom salt to the soil to aid germination, early root and cell development, photosynthesis, plant growth, and to prevent blossom-end rot. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST SAVORY Collect leaves for drying just before the flower buds open. Winter savory can be harvested year-round. Snip the tops of the branches to extend the harvest. How to harvest: Use a garden pruner or scissors to snip leaves and stems. For dried leaves, cut 6- to 8-inch stems justbefore flowering.
BEAN GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS You can make garlic spray: try this, a couple of hot peppers, a couple of medium cloves of garlic, a small onion, 1 tablespoon of dishwashing liquid, 3 cups of water; blend the peppers, garlic and onion in the blender then pour the blend into a jar and add the dish soap and water; let stand for 24 hours then strain away the pulp; put this tonic into a handheld sprayer and coat the tops and WHEN TO FERTILIZE VEGETABLES WITH SIDE DRESSING NUTRIENTS Beets: add bone meal or phosphorous at planting time; side dress when plants are 4 to 5 inches tall. Beet greens: 2 weeks after leaves appear. Broccoli: 3 weeks after transplanting and again when heads begin to form. Brussels sprouts: 3 weeks after HOW TO HARVEST AND STORE SUMMER SQUASH How to Store Summer Squash. Store summer squash by gently wiping the fruit clean with a damp cloth and then placing it in a perforated plastic bag (to maintain humidity) in the vegetable crisper of the refrigerator. Do not store summer squash in the refrigerator for more than 4 days. Avoid storing summer squash at temperatures below 50°F(10
FIVE WAYS TO COOK CHILI PEPPERS Blanch the peppers in boiling water for 3 to 4 minutes. Pat the peppers dry. Stuff the peppers with rice, corn kernels, fish, sausage, or vegetables. Arrange in a baking dish, add 1 cup of stock and bake for about 25 to 30 minutes. PEPPER PLANTING: EASY STEPS TO A BUMPER CROP 8. Support. Pepper plants greatly benefit from support. Pepper plant branches can be brittle, unlike tomato plant branches. Branches can snap when the fruit grows too heavy, so support the plant; use cages or stakes or string corrals. CUCUMBER GROWING PROBLEMS SOLVED Give cucumbers the right conditions–warm, sunny weather and consistent water–and they will be one of your top producing garden crops. To keep ahead of cucumber problems, pests and diseases, here is a troubleshooting list of possible cucumber problems with brief control suggestions.HARVEST TO TABLE
At Harvest to Table I offer easy solutions to common garden problems, helping you bring great food from your garden to your table all yearround.
WHEN TO FERTILIZE VEGETABLES WITH SIDE DRESSING NUTRIENTS Beets: add bone meal or phosphorous at planting time; side dress when plants are 4 to 5 inches tall. Beet greens: 2 weeks after leaves appear. Broccoli: 3 weeks after transplanting and again when heads begin to form. Brussels sprouts: 3 weeks after HOW TO HARVEST AND STORE COLLARDS How to Harvest Collards. Harvest leaves from low on the stem first and work your way up the stalk. Pick leaves from the outside of the plant and work inward. Be careful not to damage the stem where new leaves emerge. Leaves will come away from the stem with a sharp downward pull. You can also use a sharp knife. HAND POLLINATION OF VEGETABLES Hand pollination is the manual transfer of pollen from the stamen of one plant to the pistil of another–that is from a male flower to a female flower. Members of the Cucurbit family–squash, melons, pumpkins, and cucumbers–often have pollination problems because the male flowers commonly open days before the female flowers and so often RADISH GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Radish Growing Problems and Solutions: • Roots fail to form. Seed are sown too thickly. Thin radishes early and harvest roots as soon as they are large enough to eat. Thin seedlings to 1½ to 2 inches apart. • Seeds rot or seedlings collapse with dark water-soaked stems as soon as they appear. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST SHISO Soil preparation: Plant shiso in compost-rich, well-drained soil. Shiso prefers a soil pH of 5.5 to 6.5. Shiso will grow in average soil. Seed starting indoors: Sow seed indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last spring frost. Seeds will germinate in 7 to 21 days at 70°F. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST STEVIA How to Plant Stevia. Best location: Grow stevia in full sun; in hot dry regions grow stevia in dappled sunlight. Soil preparation: Grow stevia in a well-drained, loamy soil. Add aged compost to the planting bed and turn it under before planting. Stevia grows best when soil pH ranges from 6.7 to 7.2. CANNING SWEET PICKLE RELISH Combine the vegetables in a large bowl, a 5 or 6 quart saucepan. Sprinkle with pickling salt and stir to mix. Add cold water to cover. Let the vegetables stand covered at room temperature for 2 hours (longer if you like). Drain the vegetable mixture in a HOW TO GROW LEEKS YEAR ROUND IN TUBES Avoid sprinkling soil over the tops of plants; soil that falls into the space between leaves will be trapped. If you plant leeks in trenches, gently push the soil in around the stems and firm it in place as the plant grows. Fill soil in around leeks gradually as they develop. Don’t brush soil on the leafstalks.HOW TO CAN TOMATOES
Raw pack: Heat tomato juice in a saucepan. Fill jars with raw peeled tomatoes, pressing to fill spaces with juice. Cover the tomatoes with hot tomato juices, leaving ½ inch headspace. Hot pack: Put tomatoes in a large saucepan and add enough tomato juice to completely cover them. Simmer or gently boil the tomatoes and juice for 5 minutes.HARVEST TO TABLE
At Harvest to Table I offer easy solutions to common garden problems, helping you bring great food from your garden to your table all yearround.
WHEN TO FERTILIZE VEGETABLES WITH SIDE DRESSING NUTRIENTS Beets: add bone meal or phosphorous at planting time; side dress when plants are 4 to 5 inches tall. Beet greens: 2 weeks after leaves appear. Broccoli: 3 weeks after transplanting and again when heads begin to form. Brussels sprouts: 3 weeks after HOW TO HARVEST AND STORE COLLARDS How to Harvest Collards. Harvest leaves from low on the stem first and work your way up the stalk. Pick leaves from the outside of the plant and work inward. Be careful not to damage the stem where new leaves emerge. Leaves will come away from the stem with a sharp downward pull. You can also use a sharp knife. HAND POLLINATION OF VEGETABLES Hand pollination is the manual transfer of pollen from the stamen of one plant to the pistil of another–that is from a male flower to a female flower. Members of the Cucurbit family–squash, melons, pumpkins, and cucumbers–often have pollination problems because the male flowers commonly open days before the female flowers and so often RADISH GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Radish Growing Problems and Solutions: • Roots fail to form. Seed are sown too thickly. Thin radishes early and harvest roots as soon as they are large enough to eat. Thin seedlings to 1½ to 2 inches apart. • Seeds rot or seedlings collapse with dark water-soaked stems as soon as they appear. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST SHISO Soil preparation: Plant shiso in compost-rich, well-drained soil. Shiso prefers a soil pH of 5.5 to 6.5. Shiso will grow in average soil. Seed starting indoors: Sow seed indoors 4 to 6 weeks before the last spring frost. Seeds will germinate in 7 to 21 days at 70°F. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST STEVIA How to Plant Stevia. Best location: Grow stevia in full sun; in hot dry regions grow stevia in dappled sunlight. Soil preparation: Grow stevia in a well-drained, loamy soil. Add aged compost to the planting bed and turn it under before planting. Stevia grows best when soil pH ranges from 6.7 to 7.2. CANNING SWEET PICKLE RELISH Combine the vegetables in a large bowl, a 5 or 6 quart saucepan. Sprinkle with pickling salt and stir to mix. Add cold water to cover. Let the vegetables stand covered at room temperature for 2 hours (longer if you like). Drain the vegetable mixture in a HOW TO GROW LEEKS YEAR ROUND IN TUBES Avoid sprinkling soil over the tops of plants; soil that falls into the space between leaves will be trapped. If you plant leeks in trenches, gently push the soil in around the stems and firm it in place as the plant grows. Fill soil in around leeks gradually as they develop. Don’t brush soil on the leafstalks.HOW TO CAN TOMATOES
Raw pack: Heat tomato juice in a saucepan. Fill jars with raw peeled tomatoes, pressing to fill spaces with juice. Cover the tomatoes with hot tomato juices, leaving ½ inch headspace. Hot pack: Put tomatoes in a large saucepan and add enough tomato juice to completely cover them. Simmer or gently boil the tomatoes and juice for 5 minutes. MULCH: HOT WEATHER VEGETABLE GARDEN Summer Mulching. Apply three to four inches of dried leaves or compost or grass clippings or straw around plants at midsummer to protect plants from hot weather and reduce the soil temperature by 10°F or more. Soil temperatures of greater than 85°F/29°C can slow plant growth. The temperature of soil under mulch changes much more slowly. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST SAVORY Collect leaves for drying just before the flower buds open. Winter savory can be harvested year-round. Snip the tops of the branches to extend the harvest. How to harvest: Use a garden pruner or scissors to snip leaves and stems. For dried leaves, cut 6- to 8-inch stems justbefore flowering.
HOW TO HARVEST AND STORE PEAS Eat peas as soon after picking as possible; the sugar that makes peas sweet begins turning to starch right after picking. Store peas cold and moist, 32°-40°F (0°-4°C) and 95 percent relative humidity. Cold and moist storage is a challenge to create. Refrigerators provide the cold, but they also dry the air. MILK AND TOMATO GROWING Once again, milk–like other fungicides–does not cure fungal diseases but helps to prevent them. Milk keeps fungi from growing and spreading. A note: skim-fat milk works best; the fat in whole milk may clog up your sprayer. As well, reconstituted powdered milk will work. Tomato disease fighter formula: combine 1 part skim milk and 9 partswater.
HOW TO CAN TOMATOES
Raw pack: Heat tomato juice in a saucepan. Fill jars with raw peeled tomatoes, pressing to fill spaces with juice. Cover the tomatoes with hot tomato juices, leaving ½ inch headspace. Hot pack: Put tomatoes in a large saucepan and add enough tomato juice to completely cover them. Simmer or gently boil the tomatoes and juice for 5 minutes. HOW TO PLANT, GROW, AND HARVEST LEMON BALM You can learn how to grow lemon balm in a few minutes. Lemon balm is a perennial herb that grows best in cool weather. It has lemon-scented,mint-like leaves
HOW TO PREPARE GARDEN BEDS FOR BEAN PLANTING Preparing the planting bed. Dig a trench 18 inches wide and about 12 inches deep. Loosen the soil with a garden fork then add a 3 to 4 inch layer of aged manure or compost to the bottom of the trench. You also can add bone meal or hoof and horn fertilizer (which improves root growth and soil structure) or blood meal (which contains slow-releaseWHEN TO PICK PEAS
The best way to tell when peas are ready is to pick and taste each day until they are just right. Then harvest. Peas should be just about ready for harvest 3 weeks after the flowers appear. Shelling peas are ready when the pods have swelled and are nearly cylindrical shape. Edible pod peas are ready when they are 2-3 inches long, before the BEAN GROWING PROBLEMS AND SOLUTIONS Several possible reasons: (1) Soil is not fertile; added aged-compost to planting bed and turn it under to about 6 inches. (2) Soil is heavy in nitrogen; nitrogen results in foliage growth, not fruit growth. Add aged-compost to the planting bed–compost is equivalent to adding a complete, even fertilizer such as 10-10-10. FIVE WAYS TO COOK CHILI PEPPERS Blanch the peppers in boiling water for 3 to 4 minutes. Pat the peppers dry. Stuff the peppers with rice, corn kernels, fish, sausage, or vegetables. Arrange in a baking dish, add 1 cup of stock and bake for about 25 to 30 minutes. Consumer Privacy Information We and our advertising partners collect personal information (such as the cookies stored on your browser, the advertising identifier on your mobile device, or the IP address of your device) when you visit our site. We, and our partners, use this information to tailor and deliver ads to you on our site, or to help tailor ads to you when you visit others' sites. To tailor ads that may be more relevant to you, we and/or our partners may share the information we collect with thirdparties.
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HOW TO START A VEGETABLE GARDENBy Steve Albert 14
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Starting a vegetable garden can be fun and an inexpensive way to bring healthy food to your kitchen table. But it can be overwhelming if you don’t know where to start. The secret to getting started vegetable gardening is to take a little time to make a plan. Take a look at youryard or…
Read More
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HOW TO GROW BROCCOLI HOW TO GROW BRUSSELS SPROUTSHOW TO GROW CABBAGE
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HOW TO GROW CUCUMBERSHOW TO GROW CORN
HOW TO GROW EGGPLANTHOW TO GROW GARLIC
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HOW TO GROW LEEKS
HOW TO GROW LETTUCE
HOW TO GROW MELONS
HOW TO GROW ONIONS
HOW TO GROW PEAS
HOW TO GROW PEPPERS
HOW TO GROW POTATOES HOW TO GROW PUMPKINS HOW TO GROW RADISHESHOW TO GROW RHUBARB
HOW TO GROW SPINACH
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