|
|
Books > Health, Home & Family > Gardening > Gardening: plants > Fruit & vegetables
Imagine a garden that is as beautiful as it is productive, that
gives you fresh, wholesome, chemical-free food with flavours that
go way beyond anything the shops can offer. In Eat What You Grow,
Alys shows you how to create a rich, biodiverse garden that feeds
not only you, but supports a wide range of pollinators, bees and
butterflies, as well as other wildlife. From perennial vegetables
that come back year after year, to easy-to-grow delights, she has
selected plants that hold their own in both the garden and on the
plate. And tells you how to raise these plants, guiding you through
the process of feeding your soil, saving seed and taking cuttings
to increase your supplies. She also teaches you simple and
effective design tools that will ensure your garden looks striking
and wild, brings joy to your world and feeds you day after day.
The SEED To PANTRY Planner is the first-ever planner that helps
readers calculate everything from seed to pantry in order to grow,
cook, and preserve a year's worth of food. The SEED To PANTRY
Planner is a game changer. No more guessing how many tomato plants
are needed to grow to feed a family. DIY farmers simply insert the
number of people in their family and get the number of plants that
they need to plant. The SEED To PANTRY Planner is an actual yearly
planner which helps to keep everything in one place, including
month-at-a-glance pages for readers to record appointments along
with birthdays and week-at-a-glance pages to record daily to-do
lists. Within The SEED To PANTRY Planner, there are: Charts for
food preservation through home canning Charts for food preservation
through home dehydrating Generous worksheet space Recipe multiplier
worksheets Worksheets for prioritizing goals Graphs for planning a
garden Seed starting calendars Worksheets to keep track of herbs
and roots used medicinally Monthly budget planner worksheets Weekly
menu planning sheets that include planning for preserving
An informative and inspirational guide aimed at anyone who fancies
giving chilli growing a go. From 'Hungarian Hot Wax' to 'Red
Savina', and 'Scotch Bonnet' to 'Elephant's Trunk', chillies come
in dozens of shapes, colours and degrees of spiciness - from sweet
and succulent to blow-your-head-off hot. RHS Red Hot Chilli Grower
provides everything you need to grow your own chillies from
scratch, with step-by-step instructions for sowing seeds, caring
for the plants, harvesting the fruit and troubleshooting common
problems. Chilli-lovers will also find plenty of background
information, such as a short history of the chilli and a guide to
Scoville heat units (the official measurement of spicy heat), as
well as tasty tips for enjoying the fruits of your work. Packed
with charts, checklists, photographs and illustrations, this is the
perfect guide to the world of grow-your-own chillies.
*** This easy Q&A format book is suited to both beginner and
more experienced growers, and encompasses a wide range of subjects
to take readers beyond the basics of fruit and vegetable growing.
Taking into account the popularity for growing food from scratch
among newbie gardeners, you'll find advice in this book whether you
have a garden, an allotment, or even a balcony or other small space
to work with-everyone can get involved with growing delicious
edibles no matter what space they have available. Discover: - Which
varieties to choose for gourmet home cooking, the most nutritious
crops to grow, and how to grow unusual edibles like olives. -
Techniques and tips to get the most out of each crop, from how to
grow epic-size pumpkins to whether it's worth thinning beetroot. -
Troubleshooting tips for pest problems: ways to work with wildlife
rather than against it and providing an alternative viewpoint on
traditional problems, such as eating the weeds as well! - How to
make the most of your fruit and vegetable harvest, with information
on the best time to pick produce and how to preserve it.
A Produce Reference Guide to Fruits and Vegetables from Around the
World: Nature?s Harvest answers the many questions consumers have
about various fruits and vegetables. Providing basic, clear, and
understandable information for each produce item, this reference
guide gives you a synopsis of the fruit or vegetable, a short
history of the item, the common and uncommon name, what it looks
and tastes like, how it is used, and the time of year it is
available. Information on nutrition, serving sizes, yields, and
optimal storage conditions is also provided. From potatoes to
shepherd?s purse and from grapes to the Clementine tangor, A
Produce Reference Guide to Fruits and Vegetables from Around the
World covers both the familiar and the exotic. Other than the
obvious fruits and vegetables (such as 12 varieties of cherries and
10 different kinds of squash) you?ll also read about herbs,
mushrooms, sprouts, and nuts. A Produce Reference Guide to Fruits
and Vegetables from Around the World is packed with useful
information. From practical advice to interesting trivia, some of
the things you?ll learn include: You should not eat any green parts
of potatoes--it will make you sick. How to classify a
peach--clingstone vs. freestone and white vs. yellow. The Texas
1015 Supersweet onion is named after its recommended planting date,
October 15. Kiwis (originally from China, not Australia) contain an
enzyme that tenderizes meat. Women in China once made a dye from
the skin of eggplants to stain their teeth black. The famous mutiny
by Captain Bligh?s crew was caused by breadfruit. Gourds may have
spread between continents by floating in the ocean, as they can
float in sea water for 220 days without losing seed viability. The
two nuts mentioned in the Bible--almonds and pistachios.As new
methods in farming, storing, and shipping are allowing exotic
fruits and vegetables unheard of a few years ago to becom
Grow your way to happiness with this practical handbook for a more
sustainable life. Whether you have a large country garden or a
small backyard in the city, this essential guide to the 'Good Life'
will help you on your journey to becoming more self-sufficient -
which is something we all need to be thinking about. Climate
change, industrial farming with its reliance on chemicals, rising
food prices, fears over food security or just a desire to spend
more time outdoors - there are many reasons driving people towards
homegrown food and self-sufficiency. Growing your own fruit and
vegetables, preserving your produce and generating your own energy
are all covered in this thrifty guide by the original 'Tom and
Barbara', Eve and Terence McLaughlin, who wrote the first edition
of this book in 1979. This information-packed book has expert
advice on growing, harvesting, storing and preserving your produce.
You can brew your own beer and learn how to bottle, cure, smoke and
pickle your produce to make it last longer. The book features
easy-to-follow instructions for DIY tools and equipment to save
money, reduce energy consumption and cut back on waste. Learn how
to plan your site, explore the best planting times and methods,
discover how to grow a variety of vegetables, fruit and nuts, and
how to deal with pests and diseases. As well as growing your own
food, the book also covers the basics of keeping livestock -
including chickens, ducks, goats and pigs - and how to harness
alternative energy sources such as solar and wind power. Putting
your own food on the table and playing your part in creating a more
sustainable future is hugely rewarding and also has health benefits
- the physical exercise of planting and harvesting, the mental
wellness that comes with spending time in nature, and the reduction
in chemicals in the food you eat - there is so much in this
activity that fosters greater wellbeing. Whether you're planning a
move to full-blown self-sufficiency or are just curious about
what's involved and want to take your first steps to growing your
own food, this essential guide has everything you need to know.
*** 'Bellamy makes gardening seem simple, expressive and joyful.
Anyone can do it.' - Evening Standard 'Offers a fresh take on
gardening in small spaces.' - Countryside Grow 5 reveals a
brilliantly simple, fast way to make a beautiful garden, whether
you have a small plot or a handful of pots. With 52 planting
'recipes' using a palette of just five plants, you can create: - a
low-carbon flower garden for a changing climate - a micro-meadow in
a city space - an urban garden inspired by an ancient woodland -
high notes of colour in a tiny courtyard - a stylized slice of
nature in a pot This practical and inspirational book by
award-winning garden expert Lucy Bellamy and photographer Jason
Ingram includes more than 100 of the newest and best plants and how
to use them through the seasons.
Start growing your own food at home! Whether you're an urban
gardener, a first-time vegetable grower, or have your own
allotment, this illustrated guide takes the uncertainty out of your
harvest with clear, reliable gardening advice for every month of
the year. This gardening reference guide is filled with gardening
tips on growing everything from herbs and kale to strawberries and
rhubarb. Inside, you'll find: - Month-by-month chapters that break
down what to do through the year, with instructions on what to sow
and plant and the gardening tasks to focus on - Visual galleries
accompany every chapter that showcases the products that can be
harvested during that month - Crop planners that provide a
catalogue of more than 60 fruits, vegetables, and herbs that can be
grown in an allotment or kitchen garden - "Allotment know-how"
chapter that offers detailed, accessible advice on preparing your
allotment, choosing the correct tools and equipment, and making the
most of your plot with crop rotation - "Troubleshooter" chapter
that breaks down the warning signs of pests, diseases, and
disorders, with detailed advice on preventing and/or treating these
issues Wondering how to grow your own fruits and vegetables or how
to make the most out of your existing allotment? Allotment Month by
Month has everything you need to know about how to grow your own
fruit and vegetables: when to sow, how to cultivate, advice on
pesticide use - and step-by-step garden projects like making a
compost bin. With more than 60 fruit and vegetable crop planners,
this gardening book is your go-to guide to growing fresh, seasonal
produce in your kitchen garden, on your plot or in smaller city
spaces. Month-by-month alerts help you guard against the season's
garden pests and diseases to ensure a top-quality harvest. This new
edition has updated recommendations for the best varieties to grow
and all the latest expert gardening advice.
It is one thing to produce tomatoes or pumpkins - or any other
fruit or vegetable for the table - as they come into season, but it
becomes another when you realise that most crops in the garden
arrive in gluts with no more to be had for another year unless you
do something about it. This book shows you how to make the best use
of your highly nutritious, home-grown produce. Bob begins in the
garden, showing you how to achieve a more continuous crop as well
as how to extend your harvest. He then steps into the kitchen to
demonstrate the best way to preserve and cook your crop by
bottling, drying, jamming and smoking it. He uses his intimate and
comprehensive knowledge of each crop to advise you on how best to
treat it and store it. Try making fruit leathers, which are great
for kids; freeze your own apple juice so you can have it every day
of the year; experiment with making liqueurs and wines; preserve
nuts in chocolate, and many, many more ingenious ideas.
In this continuing series, the topic of vegetables embraces a wide
range of pieces from English, American and overseas scholars. Their
treatments encompass both a broader consideration of the vegetable
diet and the history of the cultivation and consumption of specific
varieties. Cookery and consumption are not highlighted at the
expense of cultivation, so there are some interesting essays on
allotments, market gardening in the Paris region, early-modern
vegetable gardening in England and the development of markets in
India. The theme has been treated with admirable latitude in
contributions on vegetables and diplomacy, vegetable carving, and
vegetables in Renaissance art. Essays include: (Don't) Eat Your
Vegetables: A Historical Semiotics of Carving Legumes (Julia
Abramson); The War of Vegetables: The Rise & Fall of the
English Allotment Movement (Lesley Acton); The First Scientific
Defense of a Vegetarian Diet (Ken Albala); Mukimono & Modoki:
Japan's Culinary Trompe l'oeil (Elizabeth Andoh); The Bitter - and
Flatulent - Aphrodisiac: Synchrony and Diachrony of the Culinary
Use of Muscari Comosum in Greece and Italy' (Anthony Buccini); Eat
Your Greens: Traditional Leafy Vegetables for Better Nutrition
(Jeremy Cherfas); 'We Talked About the Aubergines: Some Minor
Pleasures of European Diplomacy (Andrew Dalby); Akkoub ( Gundelia
Tournefortii - Tournefort's gundelia): An Edible Wild Thistle from
the Lebanese Mountains (Anissa Helou); Is There Salvation in
Sweetness? Sugar Beets in America (Cathy Kaufman); The Potato in
Irish Cuisine and Culture (Mairtin Mac Con Iomaire & Padraic Og
Gallagher); Sweet As Notes on the Kumara or New Zealand Sweet
Potato as a Taonga, or Treasure (Ray McVinnie); Wild Thing: The
Naga Morich Story (Michael & Joy Michaud); 'Per rape et porri
et per spinachi': Re-examining the Realities of Vegetable
Consumption at the Monastery of Santa Trinita in Post-Plague
Florence (Salvatore Musumeci); Les Maraichers - Market Gardeners of
the Ile de France (Lizbeth Nicol); Keeping the Home Fires Burning:
Culinary Exchanges, Sustainability and Traditional Vegetable
Markets in India (Krina Patel); The Los Angeles Vegetable Cult
(Charles Perry); From the Plate to the Palate: Visual Delights from
the Vegetable Kingdoms of Italy (Gillian Riley); But Did the
English Eat Their Vegetables? A Look at English Kitchen Gardens and
the Vegetable Cookery they Imply, 1650-1800 (William Rubel);
Renaissance Italy and the Fabulous, Flamboyant Inslata (June di
Schino); Pomtajer (Karin Vaneker); A Vegetable Zodiac from Late
Antique Alexandria (Susan Weingarten).
Grow-your-own food fans will be delighted to hear that it's
possible to have tasty, homegrown mushrooms to eat every month of
the year. This easy-to-follow, practical book explains how to grow
them in the garden, balcony, kitchen or cellar. Mushrooms are an
organic, sustainable and delicious form of plant nutrition and
fungi experts Magdalena Wurth and Herbert Wurth take you through
every step of the cultivation process. Learn how to grow 19
different mushroom helped along by clear tables, drawings and
photographs. Whether you start mushroom growing outdoors on tree
stumps and straw bales or indoors using compost or a kit, these
tried-and-tested methods make this the ultimate book on small-scale
mushroom growing.
Let Paul and Robin, aka Two Dirty Boys, take you through the
process of reusing items to grow plants from kitchen cuttings
otherwise bound for the waste bin. Vegetables have the
extraordinary ability to regenerate themselves without
fertilization - even your everyday kitchen scraps. With
step-by-step illustrations, this guide shows you how to grow twenty
vegetables that are every bit as delicious as their first
incarnations. Ranging from fruits and herbs that will sprout in a
matter of days, to vegetables that will delight in later seasons,
Regrown is an easy-to-follow guide to growing new plants, with a
focus on repurposing produce found in any supermarket. The projects
include everything from carrot tops and mushroom stalks to ginger,
avocado and even pineapple, with tips on how to use them in the
kitchen, too. Grow new plants from your cooking scraps - all you
need is a jar and a tapful of water... then just let nature do its
thing.
For beginning gardeners and homeowners, this handbook shows you
exactly how to plan, build, and plant a simple raised bed. Fully
illustrated step-by-step instructions make it easy and ensure
success! In just a weekend, using a few basic materials and minimal
building skills, you can set up a complete garden bed adapted for
vegetables, flowers, or herbs.
Take your love of plants to the next level and start growing some food
with this modern, easy-to-follow guidebook that shows you everything
you need to know to grow edible plants all year round!
Did you know you could grow vegetables, fruits, and herbs in
containers? Well, now you can take your houseplants to the next level
by growing home-grown produce and seasoning that will taste delicious
in all of your favorite dishes.
How to Grow Your Own Food identifies 50 common, easy-to-grow edible
plants from herbs to vegetables, along with detailed care instructions
and beautiful illustrations of each plant. You’ll find everything you
need to know about building your container garden including:
- How to choose the right size container for each plant
- How to water (and feed!) your plants for optimal growth
- When to harvest your crops for the best flavor
- And much more!
It’s time to turn your decorative plants into ones that will keep you
happy and healthy! No matter how much or how little space you have in
your apartment, you can enjoy everything—from basil to onions to
strawberries—with this practical guide to container gardening.
"Wonderfully written, beautifully illustrated, and everything you
need to know to get more productivity out of your food garden."
--Joe Lamp'l, creator and executive producer, Growing a Greener
World Discover how to get more out of your growing space with
succession planting--carefully planned, continuous seed sowing--and
provide a steady stream of fresh food from early spring through
late fall. Drawing inspiration from succession in natural
landscapes, Meg McAndrews Cowden teaches you how to implement
lessons from these dynamic systems in your home garden. You'll
learn how to layer succession across your perennial and annual
crops; maximize the early growing season; determine the sequence to
plant and replant in summer; and incorporate annual and perennial
flowers to benefit wildlife and ensure efficient pollination.
You'll also find detailed, seasonal sowing charts to inform your
garden planning, so you can grow more anywhere, regardless of your
climate. Plant Grow Harvest Repeat will inspire you to create an
even more productive, beautiful, and enjoyable garden across the
seasons--every vegetable gardener's dream.
Beans are easy to grow, easy to cook, delicious, nourishing and
beneficial for us and the planet. Growing your own beans not only
helps you build healthy soil in your garden, it also provides you
with a nutrient-rich diet. Beans can play a role in reducing the
risk of obesity, diabetes, heart disease and cancer - they are good
sources of protein, fibre, folate, iron and potassium - and they
can reduce your carbon footprint and food miles as well! This
fascinating book brings together Susan Young's 10 years of
experimentation with multiple varieties of beans. She clearly
explains how to sow, grow, harvest, dry, store and cook them, and
shares her six 'must grow' varieties. Go on a tasty culinary
journey around the world and discover a range of colourful and
historic beans, from the pink 'Fagiolo di Lamon' of Italy to the
black and white 'Bosnian Pole' bean. Learn which varieties are best
for eating fresh from the pod and those that are best for drying
and storing for later use. Beans offer year-round nutritious meals,
and dried beans can be the star of the show with their fabulous
diversity of flavours, colours and textures.
For a beautiful, productive, and edible paradise, transform your
approach to growing with The Permaculture Garden
- Create a thriving garden inspired by nature's patterns that is
better for the soil, local wildlife and your plants
- Design your space sustainably, factoring in climate, landshape,
resources, energy and your goals so all elements work together in
harmony
- Grow a diverse mix of plants together – from fruit trees to
flowers and vegetables to herbs – for year-round harvests and a more
resilient, ecological and attractive garden
Full of practical ideas and inspiration, The Permaculture Garden has
all you need to know to create and maintain a well-designed and
flourishing garden. Explanatory illustrations make key permaculture
design concepts easy to understand, while detailed photography
demonstrates real-life examples from Huw’s garden. Dive into
comprehensive growing instructions for more than 130 perennial and
annual crops – the ultimate guide on what and how to grow in your own
space for the best results.
A brief, invaluable guide to the art of growing vegetables around
the year and saving money in the process. Vegetable Growing is a
practical guide to frugal allotmenteering, including planning your
plot, looking after the plants and practical tips for keeping your
costs down, such as clever ways of making freebie alternatives to
common growing tools. An additional handy section offers advice on
which fruit and veg will save you the most money, as well as a
season-by-season guide and ideas for boosting your savings with
foraged and wild food. Written by Jonathan Stevens of the Real Men
Sow blog, who recently embarked on a mission to find out how much
he could save by growing his own fruit and vegetables on a
half-sized allotment plot.
This is a new edition of a classic of early 17th-century food
writing. The book was written by the Italian refugee, educator and
humanist Giacomo Castelvetro who had been saved from the clutches
of the Inquisition in Venice by the English ambassador, Sir Dudley
Carleton in 1611. When he came to England, he was horrified by our
preference for large helpings of meat, masses of sugar and very
little greenstuff. The Italians were both good gardeners, and had a
familiarity with many varieties of vegetable and fruit that were as
yet little known in England. He circulated his Italian manuscript
among his supporters, dedicating it to Lucy, Countess of Bedford,
herself a keen gardener and patron of literature. Gillian Riley's
translation of this hitherto unpublished document has been
recognised as being fluent, entertaining and accurate from its
first appearance in 1989. Castelvetro takes us through the
gardener's year, listing the fruit and vegetables as they come into
season, with simple and elegant ways of preparing them. Practical
instructions are interspersed with tender vignettes of his life in
his native city of Modena, memories of his years in Venice and
reminiscences of his travels in Europe. He writes of children
learning to swim in the canals of the Brenta, strapped to huge
dried pumpkins to keep them afloat; Venetian ladies ogling
passers-by from behind screens of verdant beanstalks; sultry German
wenches jealously hoarding their grape harvest; and his intimate
chats with Scandinavian royalty about the best way to graft pear
cuttings and discomfort the Pope. English cooking was on a cusp. It
had yet to absorb the new ways of Europe, although some of the best
practice of Dutch and French gardening was having its effect on our
diet. But there were still many new styles of cooking and recipes
to absorb, as well as new plants to enjoy (for instance broccoli),
and new ways to set them out on the table. This treatise
anticipates many of the changes that were to come about over the
next one hundred years. Castelvetro urges that we should eat more
salads with the same enthusiasm that was evinced by John Evelyn in
his book on salad-stuff of 1699. This edition is printed in two
colours, has a graceful typography (using the Galliard typeface)
and generous layout, and is equipped with a knowledgeable and
informative introduction by the translator.
With our unpredictable weather, there's never been a better time to
cultivate vegetables under shelter. An experienced grower, Klaus
Laitenberger shows how to use the heat and shelter of a greenhouse
or polytunnel to maximise crop production and supply tasty, healthy
food throughout the year. He gives full details of sowing,
planting, spacing and harvesting for all our best-loved herbs and
vegetables, as well as introducing exotic newcomers such as pepino
and yacon.
As the name suggests, root vegetables are vegetables whose roots
form the edible parts. These vegetables are highly nutritious and
they are particularly tasty if they are home-grown and eaten soon
after harvesting. In this book, the main types of root vegetables
are described, with useful information about the different
varieties that can be grown, their history, cultivation
requirements and cooking uses. There is key advice on preparing the
soil for new crops, growing root vegetables from seed, and making
compost. A must for the novice grower, the book also provides
information for the experienced gardener who wants to experiment
with new varieties.
|
You may like...
Pears
James Frederick Timothy Arbury
Hardcover
R54
Discovery Miles 540
|