Broad bean topsGrowing in a small space means you not only have to decide carefully what you want to grow, you also need to make the most of it come harvest time.  There are very simple choices you can make such as growing cut and come again lettuces rather than ones which are cropped in a single cut.   Harvesting just a few leaves at a time will prevent the lettuce from bolting as it will take longer to receive enough energy to do so – giving you a lot more to eat than one single cut.

However some crops will also have dual uses, or parts of the plant you may not consider as food can be eaten rather than wasted.  For example any vegetable scrap can be used in a stock pot for soups and stews, including leek tops, onion skins and the tough stalks and ribs of cabbages.  I’ve put together some more uses of common plants, some of which you may have heard of and some you may not – if you have any more then please do leave a comment below.

Courgette flowers

  • Both male and female flowers of the courgette can be eaten. You can serve them in a salad or stuff with a cheese (ricotta, mozzarella) and herb filling, then coat in batter and deep fry.

Nasturtiums

  • A useful plant for attracting beneficial insects. The flowers and leaves can be eaten in salads, put in vinegar or oil for flavour and colour. The buds can be blanched, pickled then used like capers.  Finally the stems can be used in soups.

Broad beans and Peas

  • You can eat young broad beans like mange tout, early in the season, which should encourage the plant to produce more pods.   To prevent both beans and peas from growing upwards usually the tops are pinched out – on both plants this is quite edible and can be lightly fried or used in salads.

Broccoli and Brussel sprout leaves, Turnip tops

  • Most plants of the cabbage family have edible leaves.  The young leaves of the turnip can be eaten and are even seen as a delicacy in some parts of the world.
  • You can also harvest the leaves of broccoli plants as they are growing, only take a few at a time as taking too many will rob them of the energy to produce good florets.
  • Sprout tops make excellent early spring greens, once you’ve harvested the sprouts just let the tops grow for a little longer and use like any other spring green or cabbage.

Beetroot stems

  • Beetroot is related to chard and perpetual spinach and all have edible leaves. The younger leaves can be used in salads and the older leaves can be cooked. You can also eat the leaf stems, chop them up finely and add them to a warm salad, soup, stew or casserole.
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It is a very sad thing to admit but last spring whilst listening to gardeners question time I realised there were huge gaps in my gardening knowledge.  I could grow annual vegetables on an allotment, I knew about growing fruit on a small scale but I didn’t know my pyrocantha from my cotoneaster.  I also [...]

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The easiest way to cram a lot of plants into a small space is to grow them in pots on weather-proof shelves.  Cheap(ish) plastic garden shelving can now be bought from major retailers. However, in my experience these are a false economy as they only have a limited life span – the plastic doesn’t seem [...]

June is one of the few times I like being English. It is a time for strawberries and cream, Wimbledon, the Glastonbury festival and weekend pagans drinking heavily at their local standing stones. It is a month where you want the rain for your garden but you don’t want it in the amount it can [...]

“Now every field is clothed with grass, and every tree with leaves; now the woods put forth their blossoms, and the year assumes its gay attire.” -   Virgil
May certainly feels like the time when England has put its party clothes on with so many tree and plants in blossom. I think that May feels [...]

April is a funny month, or at least is has been over the last two years. Just when you think that hot weather is finally coming to stay the heavens can open or an unexpected frost comes and bites you from behind. The gardener can never be sure if he should put out [...]

Whether you approach it from the point of view of conservation, entomology, crop pollination or simply a love of honey, beekeeping is an engaging pursuit and a fascinating window on the natural world.
So what does it take to become a beekeeper?
The essentials are simple enough: some sort of hive, a hat and a veil, an [...]

(Please note the following is a press release from Defra, however selfsufficientish 100% agree that every gardener should go peat free)
A new, younger generation of ‘Good Life’ gardeners has emerged through the recession, according to research released today by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) but they may be unwittingly harming [...]

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It’s that time of year again that many of us are reaching for the seed catalogues and decided what we are going to fill those frosty winter beds with come the warmth of spring.
Well this year I advise you do some research before sowing your seed and make sure you know where it is coming [...]

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Not being a father makes it difficult to give this book a truly objective review. This troubled me somewhat, especially as I now generate the majority of my tiny income from writing and know how useful a review can be.  So, to do it justice I tried to think back across the decades, back to [...]

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