Thursday, March 26, 2015

PERENNIAL VEGETABLES

THIS POST INCLUDES THE PERENNIAL VEGETABLES LISTED BELOW. SCROLL DOWN TO READ ABOUT ANY OR ALL OF THEM.
ASPARAGUS
BUCKSHORN PLANTAIN
CHIVES
EGYPTIAN ONIONS
GOOD KING HENRY
HORSERADISH
LEMON BALM
LOVAGE
RHUBARB
SEA KALE
SEDUM
SORREL
STINGING NETTLES












PERENNIAL is one of my very favorite words. You gotta 
love not only the flexibility of this word, but also the definition... 
LASTING AN INDEFINITELY LONG TIME.

Our perennial flowers and vegetables have become old friends. Seriously. Show them kindness and consideration, and perennials will arrive early in spring for a long, welcome visit year after year. Not only are they old friends, but they come bearing delicious, nutritious gifts!

Some perennial flowers are edible, but let's concentrate on vegetables for now. According to the article PERENNIAL VEGETABLES: GROW MORE FOOD WITH LESS WORK  in the April 2012 issue of MOTHER EARTH NEWS, there are more than 100 species of perennial vegetables growing in North America. This does not mean that all 100 will do well in Sitka. However, you can be assured that the perennial vegetables described below have, in fact, done well in Sitka. 




ASPARAGUS (Asparagus officinalis)
I have a lot of experience eating asparagus. It enhances so many meals. And, it is so delicious when eaten fresh and raw. Just snap off the new shoot at ground level and munch away. 

We were prepared with a spacious, fertile, warm, sandy, well-drained garden bed in our sunniest location for our first asparagus crowns. Asparagus like a soil pH of around 7. The crown is the root system of the asparagus plant. It was many years ago when we bought one year old asparagus crowns from the seed company SEEDS OF CHANGE. At the end of April we spread each of the crowns' roots in a circle in a wide, shallow hole, 6 to 8 inches deep, about one foot apart. We then refilled the holes housing the new occupants with fertile soil. We covered the entire bed with a floating row cover to promote more warmth. Skinny asparagus grew the first year. The instructions, to my dismay, were to let the asparagus continue to grow into feathery fern-like greens that first year. No harvesting the first year! These long lived perennials (15 years or more) are so worth the wait. The paperwork said we would be harvesting 1/2 lb. of spears per crown each year thereafter. It was true! Very few asparagus spears made it to the table though. We all would snap them off and eat them whenever we got the chance. Especially me.

If memory serves me well, we planted JERSEY GIANT, JERSEY KNIGHT, and SWEET PURPLE asparagus crowns. Male hybrids are the best producers. They live long and have strong yields.












BUCKSHORN PLANTAIN (Plantago coronopus)
Buckshorn plantain is also known as minutina or herba stella.  The young leaves are shaped a little like antlers. They make a yummy addition to any salad with a taste sweeter and nuttier in flavor than spinach or kale. It is very tasty on its own lightly steamed. Buckshorn plantain leaves make a soothing soup. Later on in the season, the flowers are a delicious addition to salads as well.

Buckshorn plantain thrives in cool rainy weather and does not mind saline soil!  It is so suited to Sitka! Cut the plant back, and it will re-grow several times throughout the season. Even after it flowers, the leaves are still tender for eating. It will overwinter, but I start more plants each year from the abundance of seeds produced by these plants. They often reseed themselves, too. Plant 10 inches apart.
BUCKSHORN PLANTAIN, YOUNG AND TENDER

BUCKSHORN PLANTAIN STARTING TO SEND UP FLOWER STALK IN CENTER
BUCKSHORN PLANTAIN BED PREPARING TO FLOWER















CHIVES (Allium schoenoprasum)
In 1976 I was presented with my very first perennial vegetable by my delightful neighbor, Stevie Thielke. We were outside visiting when Stevie dug up a huge clump of chives and sliced it right down the middle with a shovel.  "I would like to share this with you, Florence."  Yes, it is a vivid and fond memory. Since that spring of 1976, that clump of chives has been divided and shared countless times. Now, in spring of 2015, Stevie's chives are peeking out of the ground in gardens all over Sitka!
CHIVES EMERGING IN SPRING


Pick or cut off chives as much as you need as soon as they are tall enough to grab. Once a clump of chives grows tall, before flowers bloom, use a sharp knife and cut all of the remaining chives off of the plant one inch above the ground. This can be done 4 or 5 times throughout the summer. The chives will grow back each time like a lawn does. It is a great way to have an amazing amount of chives all season to eat, share or preserve. Chive pesto is delicious, by the way!
A CLUMP OF CHIVES CUT BACK TO ONE INCH




Chives freeze well! When I have an abundance, I chop the chives. 

Then I sprinkle them onto a cookie sheet and freeze them for a few hours. The frozen pieces are transferred into a ziplock and stored in a freezer. They stay green, bright and as good as fresh for months!
I simply shake out what I need and then replace the ziplock with the remaining chopped chives into the freezer... until I need some again. 



IF NOT TRIMMED, CHIVES BLOOM IN SHADES OF LAVENDER.














EGYPTIAN ONIONS (Allium cepa)
Also known as walking onions, this perennial likes well drained soil. The leaves are tubular. The stems don't grow flowers, but rather a little bundle of bulbils. The bulbils are still enclosed in a casing in the photo above. These little bulbils will actually grow some tiny leaves of their own. As the weight of the growing bulbils increases, the stem bends until finally touching the ground. Once on the ground, some of the little bulbils will take root and start a new plants. Reproduction was rapid in our garden. We had lots of walking onions after one or two seasons! It is easy to pull up or dig up a clump for sharing.

How to eat? The bulbs in the ground can be dug up at any time and used as you would any onion. Bulbs are mild in flavor like a shallot. The stems and leaves have a very strong onion flavor. Hot! The bulbils are tasty. They don't need peeling until they mature.














GOOD KING HENRY (Chenopodium bonus-henricus)
Good King Henry is a popular perennial vegetable in Europe. It is the asparagus-like shoots that are prized. The leaves, flower buds and seeds are also eaten. Also considered an herb, it is rich in vitamin C and iron. Well established Good King Henry plants can be divided for sharing in early spring. However, we started the plants in our yard from seed three years ago. Plants should be spaced about 2 feet apart. The seed info suggested waiting three years before doing any harvesting. This is our first harvest year! Early shoots and greens are tender and delicious. Briefly steam Good King Henry  on its own or with other early greens like dandelions, nettles and sorrel. Even after flowering has begun, steamed leaves and flowers are tasty.
Good news: this perennial likes moist, well drained soil in partial shade!
TENDER LEAVES AND SHOOTS OF GOOD KING HENRY
APPEAR IN EARLY SPRING.
LATER IN THE SEASON, GOOD KING HENRY ABOUT TO FLOWER













HORSERADISH Armoracia rusticana
HORSERADISH ROOTS ARE PRETTY MUCH INDESTRUCTIBLE. BY BRUSHING ASIDE THE MULCH, THE TOP OF THE HORSERADISH ROOTS ARE EXPOSED. 
                          NOW THAT YOU HAVE HAD A PEEK, 
            LET'S COVER THE ROOTS AGAIN WITH FERTILE SOIL.

Horseradish grows well in moist soils in sun or partial shade.

It may come as a surprise, but young horseradish leaves are edible, mild and flavorful when lightly steamed.
MIDSEASON HORSERADISH
People often grow horseradish to use as a condiment... a spicy sauce or relish. For use as a condiment, harvest only the side roots in late summer or fall. Leave the central taproot for continued growth. The side roots need to be cleaned and peeled. Chop and mix in a blender with a little water. Blend in a little salt and vinegar before storing in a container in the fridge.














LEMON BALM (Melissa Officinalis)


Lemon balm is commonly defined as a mint or herb. Because it is a wonderful addition to salad, it is included here as a perennial vegetable. 
Pick a large handful of lemon balm leaves. The leaves will add a delightful burst of lemon to any salad. And, without question, lemon balm leaves make the best of teas. Fresh leaves crushed in your drinking water adds a refreshing touch and taste.

Although lemon balm starts readily from seed, it makes more sense to dig up a start from someone with a mature clump in their garden. Plant your lemon balm in well-drained, fertile soil. It does not mind partial shade.











LOVAGE (Levisticum officinale)
When I told a friend, Jeanne Longstreth, how much I love celery, she suggested I grow lovage. I am so grateful for her suggestion! Lovage is an early season perennial vegetable that tastes a lot like celery. Harvest the early shoots of lovage along with sorrel. Together they cook into a delicious, mild flavored soup. 
NEW SHOOTS OF LOVAGE IN MARCH

If you wait until lovage is mature, it tastes like celery times a thousand! Way too strong to eat!
LOVAGE ON ITS WAY TO MATURITY
Our lovage was started from seed. It has grown and flourished in well-drained fertile soil in partial shade. These beautiful plants will grow to well over 6 feet tall! Divide and share in late fall or very early spring.

















RHUBARB (Rheum x cultorum)
Many people think of rhubarb as a fruit. 
In fact, rhubarb is a perennial vegetable. 

When you see lots of rhubarb shoots emerging in spring, divide and share. This is necessary at least every five years... or the plant will be crowded with smaller and smaller stalks.
RHUBARB EMERGING IN MARCH. IT'S TIME FOR THIS PARTICULAR PLANT TO BE DIVIDED AND SHARED.
Rhubarb likes a cool climate and is a heavy feeder. Fertilizer should be nitrogen rich. Chicken manure has worked well for us sprinkled on the ground around the plant. Loose seaweed from the high tide line spattered with herring eggs after the herring spawn works well, too. 

This giant variety of rhubarb has been grown and shared by many Sitkans  for decades.

You would think such large rhubarb stalks would be tough with an unpleasant taste. In fact, this rhubarb is tender and flavorful. One stalk is more than enough for a pie!
RHUBARB PICKED FOR A PIE!
Rhubarb leafstalks can be eaten raw, but are usually cooked in pies and sauces. One of our daughters baked us this beyond delicious strawberry rhubarb pie!


We discovered that mixing strawberries together with rhubarb and cooking it up into a sauce is also an unusually delicious treat. What you get is an incomparable sweet and sour sauce! 

In some countries, rhubarb stalks are chopped and cooked into stews and soups adding a tangy flavor and lovely color.

*It is important to keep in mind that only the stalks of rhubarb are edible. The leaves, roots and flowers of rhubarb cause sickness and even death.














SEDUM (Sedum spectabile)
Who would have thought that the common ornamental, sedum, is a delicious edible vegetable! Sedum is a perennial vegetable happily growing in many a Sitka garden. This plant has attractive little pink or white flower heads often buzzing with bees. Any of the ornamental varieties of sedum are edible.

Grow sedum in well-drained fertile soil in sun to part shade. They easily grow from seed and readily spread. Divide and share from a healthy sedum clump in early spring. 

At any time in the growing season, use the leaves whole or chopped into a salad. Sedum is surprisingly juicy and flavorful!













SEA KALE (Crambe maratima)
BEAUTIFUL EARLY SUMMER SEA KALE

It was so exciting to discover this versatile, palatable, perennial vegetable. What a fascinating plant. After reading about sea kale, it sounded perfect for Sitka. Sea kale is found wild along the shorelines of Europe and Great Britain. Part of the brassica family, sea kale looks and tastes a lot like a mixture of cabbage and broccoli. 


This early perennial vegetable provides food throughout the season! New shoots in spring have an asparagus flavor.
NEW SEA KALE SHOOTS IN MARCH


Young sea kale leaves and stems are tender and delicious in salads, steamed, stir fried or sauteed. The flavor is similar to mild cabbage.
YOUNG SEA KALE LEAVES READY FOR STEAM OR SAUTE



Late summer leaves, stalks, buds and flowers are reminiscent of broccoli in appearance and taste.
TENDER AND TASTY SEA KALE FLOWER BUDS




What looks like a  a large seed pod is actually the tiny fruit of sea kale:






Once dried, the fruit is a little cork-like ball. It floats! 




Inside each small ball is a seed. 





Years ago, I ordered my seeds from FEDCO SEEDS. They still carry sea kale seeds, but you will need to order early.




Here is some information from the seed catalog. Click on it to enlarge:





In order to plant the seeds in spring with good germination, you will need to: 
  • Stratify the little balls in late March (put it in your refrigerator in a plastic bag or ziplock for a month or in the freezer for two weeks). This process breaks the seeds' dormancy and helps the seeds germinate faster.
  • When you remove the little balls from the freezer, score the seed cover (carefully make a little slice or nick in the seed cover. I do this with my fingernail). 
  • Start indoors in 4" pots. Bury about 1/4" deep. I like to put two or three of the covered seeds per pot. Germination is not that great.
  •  Place in a warm location and cover the tray of 4" pots loosely with plastic.
  • Remove the cover once the seeds have sprouted.
  • Move plants outside into a greenhouse or protected spot for hardening off in early May.  
  • Transplant starts out into the prepared garden bed mid to late May.

Dividing sea kale plants to share with others has not gone well for me. Too many damaged roots. Instead, I have had extra plants growing and would dig up entire mature plants for sharing. Beware the roots go deep and sideways. Otherwise, starting seeds works fine. It just takes a while. You will be harvesting from large, mature plants by the third year when started from seed.















SORREL (Rumex scutatus)


Sorrel, an early spring perennial vegetable, has deep roots happily growing in acid soil. We have a large, healthy plant growing in gravel from a stray seed in our yard! A carefree plant! There are many varieties of sorrel to choose from. We chose a french sorrel noted for low oxalic acid. Literature discourages excessive  consumption of oxalic acid because of its effect on calcium. It sounds like you would need to eat an enormous amount for it to be a problem.  Just in case, our sorrel was started with these seeds:


Once established,  the large, healthy clumps of sorrel are easily divided for sharing. In fact, dividing sorrel regularly is good for its health!

In early spring, the tender, bright green sorrel leaves are so welcome and so delicious. They are a treat for breakfast in omelets or hot egg and cheese open face sandwiches.





Sorrel soup is really special. 



What else?
Sorrel sauces can easily be made for fish or meat.
Sorrel is a welcome addition in salad. 
Layer some leaves in your baked dishes. 
Blend a large handful of sorrel into a smoothie or green drink.

The drink below was made from water, banana, blueberries, sorrel, yogurt and a little orange juice. Delicious and refreshing!

                                                 

When the leaves grow tall and shoots appear for flowering, we cut back the entire clump to 4 or 5 inches... and the growth starts all over again! We do this 3 or 4 times throughout the season and enjoy plenty of sorrel. The tart, lemon flavored leaves can be harvested and enjoyed throughout the season. 

Want to store some sorrel for winter? Gather a bunch of the leaves and place them directly in a ziplock bag... or vacuum seal them. They freeze well. We use our frozen sorrel throughout the winter. 



















STINGING NETTLES (Urtica dioica)
Often regarded as a weed, nettles spread by means of shallow rhizomes. The more fertile the soil, the happier the nettles... except in shady spots.

Nettles are a spring tradition! In early spring, harvest the nutritious shoots and leaves. Be sure to wear gloves! Steam, make into soup, quiche or stir fry. Once cooked, the sting is gone.

Propagation is simple. Dig up and relocate a clump from your nettle patch. Wear gloves! Lots of gardeners like to keep their nettles in containers. 

Because there were no nettles around when my interest was peaked, our nettles were started from seed... a gift from my friend, Hope Merritt. 











         MULCHING  PERENNIAL  VEGETABLES
To nourish and protect perennials, lay a thick blanket of organic matter, a mulch, all around the plants in late fall. Protection from freezing weather and erosion prevention are among the benefits of mulching. 

My first few years of gardening in Sitka, I collected massive amounts of fallen leaves for mulch. It did not take long to notice that our beaches hold a wealth of mulch and fertilizer at the high tide line.
A wide array of seaweeds break loose from the sea floor in rough weather and wash up to mix with such things as evergreen needles, alder leaves, fish bones and broken shells.



Early in April, herring eggs are often added to the high tide line mix after the annual spring herring spawn. In fall, dead salmon carcasses wash out from streams. It all piles up at the high tide lines. Grab it and haul it away when you see it! Otherwise, the next higher incoming tide just might grab it all and pull it back into the depths of the sea!





Helpful perennial vegetable books:














HAPPY GARDENING!!!



















6 comments:

  1. What a wonderful compilation of perennials! Thank you for this. I know most of these but learned a few new things. I'm bookmarking and sharing your blog with my Juneau friends.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi Leslie! Glad you enjoyed this post. After having such a mild winter, our perennial vegetables are already in their glory. HAPPY GARDENING!

      Delete
  2. I know this post is pretty old but some great information especially for those newcomers to Sitka. My family will be trying our hand at our first garden here this year. We just moved here last summer. Most of the plants on this list you stated was best to get a split from someone. Would you have anything that you need to split also would you do home visits to help with the planning phase? Thank you

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks so much Florence for your comprehensive description of perennials that you grow in Sitka and recipes and ideas for cooking them and putting them up. I listened to you last year on a zoom presentation and because of your talk I ordered sea kale and it is just starting to come up in my Prince of Wales garden - thanks for all this helpful information! Hope your garden is growing well this year. Linda Squibb

    ReplyDelete