If you don't let your edibles flower and make seeds
you are missing out on some great perks: free seeds, spices, and pest
management. But there seems to be an unwritten rule that in the tidy urban
or suburban garden lettuce shouldn’t be allowed to bolt or parsley let go to
flower.
Who wants a seedy garden? I do, for one.
The Beauty and Power of Seeds
Landscaping with edibles sometimes involves shifting our
ideas about what a garden should look like, especially the front yard. The
first time I let my lettuce bolt I watched with fascination how it shot up
several feet high in a vigorous tower, then quickly produced abundant tiny
flowers. A passerby asked "What is that? It’s beautiful!".
Before that experience I had no idea that lettuce produced
flowers and seeds that could be collected and saved for my next lettuce crop.
It felt empowering - getting free seeds was in my grasp!
Green cilantro seeds (coriander) are spicy |
Seeds with a Bonus - Stock Your Spice Rack
With some edibles, letting the plant set seeds provides an
extra bonus. Cilantro and dill are popular herbs whose leaves are what
most gardeners and cooks are after, but by letting them go to seed we get a
second product for our kitchen - their seeds for cooking. Cilantro, also known
as coriander, has small green fruits that are incredibly fragrant and citrusy.
Try cooking them in a stir fry or with sauteed vegetables. They're
especially good in curried dishes. Let some of the fruits dry completely and
grind with a mortar and pestle to use them in recipes.
Other seeds to save for cooking are fennel and lovage seeds.
Store the seeds whole in small jars with lids. Recycled spice jars are perfect.
And the next time you are in the grocery store make sure you check on how much
money you're saving by collecting your own spice seeds. Spices are expensive
and they usually aren't very fresh unless you buy from a specialty supplier.
Flowering parsley is pretty and a powerful magnet for beneficial insects |
Fight Garden Pests with Flowers
The flowers of many vegetables and herbs are highly
attractive to pollinators and other beneficial
insects. Parsley flowers are huge magnets for hover flies and tiny
predators such as tachinid flies and parasitic wasps. Watch closely and you
will see them going to work for you in the garden keeping pests under control.
In fact, using certain plants to attract beneficial insects is a well-known
strategy of Integrated Pest Management (IPM) for organic and sustainable gardening, instead of
using pesticides.
Enjoy the full benefits of your edible landscape by letting
it go to seed. Once you experience the magic of your flowering edibles you'll become a convert, I promise!
A version of this post was published on Eat Drink Better
Photos: Patricia Larenas, Urban Artichoke
What an excellent post. I really enjoyed it and am going to actually let my garden run amok and do what comes naturally now. Cheers :)
ReplyDeletethanks for reading- i just broke my wrist after falling face first on cement in my back-yard, so my garden will definitely be seedier this summer!
ReplyDeletecheers- btw, i like your blog...