Is there a particular variety of spinch to grow if I want baby leaves - the sort that look nice in salads? Or should I just grow anything and try to pick them small and young?
Thanks
Baby Leaf Spinach
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- alan refail
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Hi Binky
I rarely grow spinach - there are so many things I prefer as small leaves for salads.
However, I think the answer to both parts of your question would be yes.
BORDEAUX is claimed as specially bred for baby leaves.
Any variety can be sown and harvested small.
Bordeaux is more attractive for good-looking salads, but said to bolt even more readily than other varieties.
I rarely grow spinach - there are so many things I prefer as small leaves for salads.
However, I think the answer to both parts of your question would be yes.
BORDEAUX is claimed as specially bred for baby leaves.
Any variety can be sown and harvested small.
Bordeaux is more attractive for good-looking salads, but said to bolt even more readily than other varieties.
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Hi Binky. If you like peppery, land cress is good and will seed itself if you let it. I'm trying unwins parcel this year for a parsley/ celery like flavour, useful for soups, sauces, and salads.
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- alan refail
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Hi Binky
You asked, so here goes! These are most of what I grow for “little leaves”, at the appropriate time/s of the year. I have put my sowing dates.
Claytonia sow late August – early September
Corn Salad sow late August – early September
Cress sow sow April & May & June
Salad Rocket sow April & June & July
Wild Rocket sow May & August
Mixed Endive and Scarole sow May or June
Mixed Lettuce sow May and July http://www.seedsofitaly.com/product/45
Mixed Chicory sow May or June http://www.seedsofitaly.com/product/118
Red Orache sow April
Mustard Green in the Snow sow early September
Mustard Golden Streaks sow June
Mustard Ruby Streaks sow June
Mizuna sow early September
Mibuna sow early September
Cime di Rapa (turnip tops/Broccoli Raab) sow April
Peas to eat as pea shoots sow February and August viewtopic.php?f=4&t=6338
Broad Beans to eat as bean shoots sow October/November or February
If you want to specialise in baby salads look out for Charles Dowding’s excellent book: Salad Leaves for All Seasons or go to his website at http://www.charlesdowding.co.uk/
You asked, so here goes! These are most of what I grow for “little leaves”, at the appropriate time/s of the year. I have put my sowing dates.
Claytonia sow late August – early September
Corn Salad sow late August – early September
Cress sow sow April & May & June
Salad Rocket sow April & June & July
Wild Rocket sow May & August
Mixed Endive and Scarole sow May or June
Mixed Lettuce sow May and July http://www.seedsofitaly.com/product/45
Mixed Chicory sow May or June http://www.seedsofitaly.com/product/118
Red Orache sow April
Mustard Green in the Snow sow early September
Mustard Golden Streaks sow June
Mustard Ruby Streaks sow June
Mizuna sow early September
Mibuna sow early September
Cime di Rapa (turnip tops/Broccoli Raab) sow April
Peas to eat as pea shoots sow February and August viewtopic.php?f=4&t=6338
Broad Beans to eat as bean shoots sow October/November or February
If you want to specialise in baby salads look out for Charles Dowding’s excellent book: Salad Leaves for All Seasons or go to his website at http://www.charlesdowding.co.uk/
Hello Binky
I grew spinach 'Renegade F1' - sown last year and overwintered in a frame. It's excellent. The young leaves are great for salad and the more mature leaves are a fine cooked veg. without that metallic taste that spinach sometimes has. It is very slow to bolt from early sowing so it says on the packet and is resistant to mildew.
Another good leaf to try is beetroot 'Bulls Blood'. The young red leaves are very tender and if left to mature it will give you a beetroot.
John
I grew spinach 'Renegade F1' - sown last year and overwintered in a frame. It's excellent. The young leaves are great for salad and the more mature leaves are a fine cooked veg. without that metallic taste that spinach sometimes has. It is very slow to bolt from early sowing so it says on the packet and is resistant to mildew.
Another good leaf to try is beetroot 'Bulls Blood'. The young red leaves are very tender and if left to mature it will give you a beetroot.
John
The Gods do not subtract from the allotted span of men’s lives, the hours spent fishing Assyrian tablet
What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning Werner Heisenberg
I am a man and the world is my urinal
What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning Werner Heisenberg
I am a man and the world is my urinal
- alan refail
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Morning Binky
If you want to get an idea of what Charles Dowding's book covers, have a look inside at Amazon
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/reader/19003 ... eader-page
If you want to get an idea of what Charles Dowding's book covers, have a look inside at Amazon
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/reader/19003 ... eader-page
- Colin_M
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alan refail wrote:...look out for Charles Dowding’s excellent book..
Nice one Alan, I can also recommend this one too
Charles Dowding also runs really interesting courses, if you can get to his place: Courses for 2010
I was lucky enough to be bought a day's visit as a birthday present from my wife
