Indispensable, especially for indoor starts.
Plastic Photo Boxes
Wavy Gravy. Wiggly purple Beauregarde Snow Peas hold their color even when cooked.
A Special Thanks to Chef Dan Barber and Row 7 Seeds for their yearlong collaboration on this feature. row7seeds.com
3. PLANT
There are two primary planting periods: “Early” and Memorial Day. Early is “as soon as the ground can be worked.” This is when you plant peas, lettuce, brassicas, favas, and other cool stuff. Memorial Day is when tomatoes and peppers, etc., go in. Succession planting is a necessity when a whole row of head lettuce harvested all at once is too much for your household. I plant a few inches each week. And I’m an aggressive thinner. Worth studying up on: soil health, crop rotation, companion planting, beneficial flowers.
The Kitchen Garden: How to Garden in Four Steps ediblebrooklyn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ediblebrooklyn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Every other tomato is bullsh t : Meet NY s prized produce
How the Hudson Valley became home to a coveted Italian tomato
FacebookTwitterEmail
Twenty years ago, Cesare Casella gave Rick Bishop of Mountain Sweet Berry Farm in Roscoe a tomato seed to grow that Casella snuck over from his hometown of Lucca, Italy. Today this Italian heirloom, prized by CSA members, sauce makers and tomato sandwich lovers, has found a prominent home at farms throughout the Hudson Valley.Rick Bishop
Rick Bishop first heard of the Canestrino tomato 20 years ago when chef Cesare Casella approached him at the New York City Greenmarket in Union Square. Casella often sourced Bishop’s Catskills-grown produce for his New York City restaurant at the time, Beppe, but this was the first time he asked Bishop to plant a special crop for him.
Palestinian Seeds Come to America, Stories and Artwork Included Feb 20, 2021 Vivien Sansour is bringing yakteen to the United States. Photography by Samar Hazboun
2K Shares
Vivien Sansour founded the Palestine Heirloom Seed Library in the West Bank in 2014 as a way to both preserve Palestinian culture at home and to share it with the world. More than a half-decade later, those efforts and her seeds have found their way into the American marketplace, specifically in the form of the Hudson Valley Seed Co. seed catalogue. The New York-based company is selling seeds for Sansour’s
yakteen gourd, which it believes marks the first time that a Palestinian heirloom variety has been available commercially in the United States.