Posts Tagged ‘copper’
Tuesday, August 11th, 2009
Summer cabbage…. With its peak harvest in August and September this vegetable provides an excellent source of Vitamin C leading up and through autumn. All health benefits aside summer cabbage has had its image tarnished by the soggy mush that’s served up by school and work canteens. In this guide I hope banish the soggy cabbage blues as I show you how to cook cabbage correctly, but first let’s look at how to grow summer cabbage at home.
(more…)
Tags: acid, acidity, alkaline, alkalinity, April, August, autumn, ball-headed, Bird protection, birds, boil, boiled bacon, Bolting, boron, Boron deficiency, braising, Brassica oleracea capitata, brassicas, broom handle, bubble and squeak, butter, butterflies laying, cabbage, cabbage root fly, caraway seeds, caterpillar, Chafer grubs, chop, chopped cabbage, cloches, Clubroot, cold ham, cold water, coleslaw, coloured green, compact, conical, cook cabbage, copper, cream, crinkly, cutting, Cutworms, D handle, damp, damp sacking, dark, Derby Day, Diamond-back moth, dibber, dig, digging, Downy mildew, drill, early winter, English dish, farmyard animal manure, fast growing, fast growth, Fine netting, fish blood and bone, flat, Flea beetle, fleece, frames, frost, frugal, fungal disease, Gall weevil, garden centres, garden fork, Golden Acre, good cropper, grass, grass clippings, Greyhound, ground lime, growing area, Growmore, hand fork, harvesting, hay, Head cabbage, Heading cabbage, health benefits, Heartless cabbage, herbicide-free, Hispi, home, homemade compost, iron, June, Leaf Spot, leaves, leggy, Magnesium deficiency, malformed, manganese, Manganese deficiency, March, mashed potatoes, May, Mealy aphid, meats, melted butter, Minicole, moisture, morning, mulch, netting, neutral, nitrogen, nutrients, October, Oil, organic, outer leaves, oval heads, pan, paper, peak harvest, pests are controlled, pH, phosphorus, planting, plastic bags, pointed heads, poor crops, potassium, potatoes, Primo, purple, Quick maturing, rain, raked, refrigerator, ring spot, round, running to seed, salad crisper, sautéed, scents, school, secondary crop, seed, seed germination, September, shade, shallow fried, sharp knife, short-term storage, slatted boxes, slug, small plots, smooth, snails, soggy, soil, soil test, soils ph, solid hearts, soluble, Southern Europe, sowing, spade shaft, spades depth, Split hearts, Splitting, steam, stem the heads of cabbage, stir-fry, Stonehead, stones, straw, strips, strong flavours, stunting, successional sowings, suitable to grow in Ireland, sulphate of iron, summer cabbage, sunny, Swede Midge, swollen, taste, tender, thinned, thinning, transplantation, transplanting, trench, trowel, true leaves, veg, vegetable, vegetable peelings, vegetable soup, vinegar dressing, vitamin C, water, watering, waterlogged, weed free, well-balanced fertilizer, well-rotted, wet newspaper, wet rot, wheelbarrow, White blister, White rust, Whitefly, wilting leaves, wind rock, Winnigstadt, Wire stem, work, yellow leaves, Yellows virus, young, zinc
Posted in Uncategorized | 5 Comments »
Monday, August 10th, 2009
Spring cabbage…. A hardy vegetable that’s an excellent source of Vitamin C and glutamine, an amino acid which has anti-inflammatory properties. Health benefits aside, the image of spring cabbage has been tarnished by the soggy mush served up in school and work canteens. In this guide I hope to banish the soggy cabbage blues as I show you how to cook cabbage correctly, but first let’s look at how to grow it at home.
(more…)
Tags: acid, acidity, alkaline, alkalinity, amino acid, anti-inflammatory, August, autumn, bacon, ball-headed, Bird protection, birds, Black Rot, boil, Bolting, boron, Boron deficiency, Bowkail, braising, Brassica oleracea capitata, broom handle, bubble and squeak, butter, butterflies, cabbage heads, cabbage plants, cabbage root fly, caraway seeds, caterpillar, Chafer grubs, chop, Clubroot, cold ham, cold water, coleslaw, conical, cook cabbage, cooking, copper, cream, crinkly, crop, cutting, Cutworms, damp sacking, dark, Diamond-back moth, dibber, digging, Diseases, Downy mildew, dressing, drill, Durham early, Early cabbage, early winter, eggs, English dish, equipment, farmyard animal manure, February, feeding, Fine netting, fish blood and bone, flat, flavour, Flea beetle, freeze, frost, frugal, fungal disease, Gall weevil, garden centres, garden fork, germination, glutamine, grass, grass clippings, green, ground lime, Growmore, hand fork, hand tool, handle, hardy vegetable, harvesting, hay, Head cabbage, Heading cabbage, health benefits, heart, Heartless cabbage, herbicide, home, home soil test, homemade compost, iron, July, June, Leaf Spot, leaves, life expectancy, limited space, Magnesium deficiency, manganese, Manganese deficiency, Mealy aphid, meats, melted butter, metal, Mid September, morning, mulch, netting, nitrogen, October, Offenham 3, Offenham-Flower of Spring, Oil, organic option, pan, paper, pests, pH, phosphorus, pigeons, Pixie, planting, plastic bags, potassium, potatoes, protective clothing, purple, Rake, refrigerator, ring spot, roots, running to seed, salad crisper, sautéed, scents, school, secondary crop, seed, seedbed, seedling, shallow fried, sharp knife, shelter, slatted boxes, slug attack, small plots, smooth, snail, soggy mush, soil, soil nutrients, soils ph, Southern Europe, sowing, spade shaft, spades depth, Split hearts, Spring cabbage, spring greens, Spring Hero, stem, stems, stir-fry, stones, storage, straw, stunting, sulphate of iron, Summer, sunny spot, Swede Midge, sweet tasting, texture, thinning, tolerate shade, transplant, transplantation, trench, trowel, true leaves, vegetable peelings, vegetable soup, vinegar, vitamin C, water, waterlogged, weed free, weeding, well-balanced fertilizer, well-rotted, wet newspaper, wet rot, wheelbarrow, White blister, White rust, Whitefly, wilting, wind-rocked, winter, Wintergreen, Wire stem, wooden, work canteens, yellow leaves, Yellows virus, zinc
Posted in Growing guides., Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Saturday, August 1st, 2009
Kohlrabi…. high in vitamin C and K, potassium, fibre as well as the antioxidant carotenoids b-carotene and lutein. Kohlrabis flavour varies between nutty (uncooked) and broccoli with a hint of radish (cooked). If you seek unusual tastes and looks then this give this member of the cabbage family a second glance.
(more…)
Tags: acidity, amendments, antioxidant carotenoids, autumn, b-carotene, Boiled, Bolting, boron, Brassica caulorapa, Broccoli, butterflies, cabbage family, cabbage root, caterpillar, clipped, Clubroot, coleslaw, compost, cooked, copper, cream, crispy, Cutworms, Downy mildew, dressing, drill, early winter, easy, eggs, farmyard animal, fibre, Fine netting, fish blood and bone, flavour, freeze, garden, German Turnip, germination, grass, grass clippings, grate, grating, green, green kohl rabi, ground lime, growing area, Growmore, ham, hay, herbicide, home soil test, homemade compost, iron, July, Kohlrabi, Kolibri, label, Lanro, late season harvest, leaves, life expectancy, lightly raked, Logo, lutein, manganese, Manure, March, meats, melted butter, Monj, mulch, netting, neutral, nitrogen, Northern Europe, nutty, Oil, organic option, peat moss, pH, phosphorus, pigeons, planting, plastic bags, potassium, potatoes, protective clothing, purple, Purple Danube, radish, Rake, refrigerator, roots, rosette, salad crisper, salads, seed, seedlings, shelter, slightly acid, soil, soil moisture, soils ph, sowing, spades depth, steamed, steamed greens, Stem turnip, stirfry, stones, straw, successional sowings, sulphate of iron, sunny spot, sweet, swollen stem, tasty, thinning, trench, trowel, true leaves, Turnip, Turnip cabbage, Turnip-rooted cabbage, uncooked, veg, vegetable peelings, vinegar, vitamen K, vitamin C, water, waterlogged, weed free, weeding, well-balanced fertilizer, wheelbarrow, white, yields, zinc
Posted in Growing guides., Uncategorized | 1 Comment »
Sunday, July 26th, 2009
Carrots… upon harvest you could be treating yourself to a brightly coloured vegetable whose available nutrients actually increase with cooking - as long as it is not over-cooked. A good source of magnesium, potassium, vitamins A and C together with a form of calcium that is easily absorbed into the body. All wrapped up in a vegetable that is reasonably easy to grow once your selected soil and planting location are suitable.
(more…)
Tags: Amsterdam Forcing, Asia, August, Autumn King, baby carrots, balanced, Black Rot, boil, boron, butter, calcium, carrot root fly, Carrot-Willow Aphid, carrots, Chantenay Red Cored 2, chopped parsley, Clayburn, cloches, cold water, cook carrots, copper, Daucus carota, drainage, dry sharp sand, early summer, enviromesh, Europe, exhibitors carrot, fang, Fanging, farmyard animal manure, fast variety, February, fernlike, fertiliser, fish blood and bone, fleece, Flyaway, foliage, Fork, forking, frames, freeze, freezing, garden, germination time, grass, grated, Green Top, ground, Growmore, grubs, hand fork, hay, home soil test, homemade compost, horticultural fleece, iron, James Scarlet, larvae, lemon, life expectancy, lightly salted water, magnesium, main-crop carrots, malformed, manganese, March, Motley Dwarf Virus, Nantes 2, neutral, nitrogen, Oil, organic, peat moss, peel, pH 5.5, ph7.5, phosphorus, plastic bags, potassium, raisins, raw, root vegetable, rosette, sandy soil, scent, Sclerotinia Rot, shallow, shelter, short-rooted carrot varieties, slices, slightly acid, Small Roots, snack, Splitting, St Valery, steam carrots, stony, straw, successional, sulphate of iron, Swift Moth, tapered, taproots, thinning, Time from planting to harvest, tolerate, troubles of carrots, vegetable peelings, Violet Root Rot, vitamin A, vitamin C, weed free, wheelbarrow, zinc
Posted in Growing guides., Uncategorized | 5 Comments »
Thursday, July 23rd, 2009
Beetroots…round, cylindrical or tapered swollen roots that are way more versatile than many give them credit for. Fairly pest free, they are also a good crop for the organic gardener. Find out for yourself as we detail amongst other things the varieties suitable to grow in Ireland, and how to plant or sow them.
(more…)
Tags: acid soil, Albina Vereduna, alkaline soils, autumn, beet, Beetroots, best varieties, Beta vulgaris, Black bean aphid, Black Leg, bleed, boil, bolt-resistant, Boltardy, Bolting, boron, Boron deficiency, Burpee’s Golden, chutney, cloches, cooking, copper, Crimson beetroot, cut, Cylindra, cylindrical, Detroit, disease resistance, dries, drill, dry peat, early March, early winter, easy, end of July, Fanging, farmyard animal manure, feeding, fertiliser, fertilizer, fish blood and bone, flavour, fortnight, frames, freeze, garden centres, germination, golf ball, Greens, ground lime, Grow beetroot, Growmore, harvesting, hasten germination, hay, Heart Rot, home soil test, how to, Ireland, iron, label, Leaf Miner, Leaf Spot, leaf yellowing, leaves, life expectancy, manganese, Mangold Fly, Mediterranean, metre, Mid-March, neutral, nitrogen, orange skin, organic gardener, origin, paper, pest free, Pests and Diseases, pH, phosphorus, plant, plant ills, plastic bag, potassium, preservation, raked, red, refrigerator, roots, rosettes, salads, scorching, seedlings, shelter, slatted boxes, slices, smooth skin, Snowhite, soil, soil conditions, soil nutrients, soups, Southern Europe, sow, sow seeds, spades depth, Speckled Yellows, spinach, sprout, stones, storage, successional harvesting, suitable to grow in Ireland, sunny spot, supermarket, swollen, tapered, tennis ball, thinnings, tips, tolerate shade, trench, trowel, vegetable, vegetables, vigour, waterlogs, weed free, wheelbarrow, When to grow, Where to grow, white, White beet, yellow, Yellow beet, zinc
Posted in Growing guides. | No Comments »