Free Edible Garden Plans
March 19, 2012 | Categories: Edible Gardening 101, Organic GardeningWe hope you are as inspired as we are to get started planting a kitchen garden after reading Grow Cook Eat author Willi Galloway’s edible garden guide, “Home-Grown Flavor,” in the April/May 2012 issue of Vegetarian Times.
This growing season, we’ll be there every step of the way. From early spring to summer’s end, Galloway will be blogging weekly, sharing her wisdom on planning, planting, harvesting, cooking, preserving, and more.
To help you get started, Galloway created detailed spring-into-summer garden plans for both in-ground and container gardens, and we mapped them out using growveg.com, an online garden planner. Download and print the plans (links below), or take advantage of the free 30-day trial on growveg.com to create your own.
Be sure to follow along on the blog all season long, and don’t be shy about asking Galloway your burning gardening questions and sharing a few tips of your own.
FREE EDIBLE GARDEN PLANS
Download Willi Galloway’s Home-Grown Flavor In-Ground Garden Plan here.
Download Willi Galloway’s Home-Grown Flavor Container Garden Planner here.
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Edible Gardening 101: How to Harvest and Store OnionsMy Walla Walla sweet onions are ready for harvest, but that doesn’t mean they are quite ready for storage. Onions require a period to “cure” before you can store them away for the winter. The curing process ensures that each onion develops a tight, dry, papery outer wrapper READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: 5 Gorgeous Vegetable VarietiesI love late summer for the food. It is prime harvest time in the garden and this weekend I squealed with delight when I realized it was time (finally!) to harvest my ‘Rattlesnake’ bush beans. These gorgeous heirloom snap beans produce wide cream and purple streaked pods that are READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: How to Hand Pollinate SquashDo your young zucchini or pumpkins suddenly shrivel up and die without warning, even though the plant looks perfectly healthy? If so, not to worry. Your plant is fine! The problem is with pollination. Winter and summer squash, pumpkins, melons, and cucumbers all belong to the Cucurbit family. Cucurbits are READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Organic Powdery Mildew ControlAugust reliably brings two things to the garden: hot days and powdery mildew. This common fungal disease looks like a silvery powder and it coats the leaves, stems, and fruit of many popular plants. In the vegetable garden READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Harvesting Coriander SeedsCilantro leaves have a flavor that most people either love or hate. But even if you think this bright, cool season herb tastes like soap, you should still consider growing a few plants in your garden, because cilantro and the spice coriander both come from the same plant, Coriandrum sativum. READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Pruning TomatoesAmong passionate tomato growers, the same debate rages every summer: to prune or not to prune out suckers. Suckers are the growth that emerges where a branch of a tomato joins the plant’s main stem. If left to grow, the suckers develop into branches that eventually produce fruit. Some gardeners READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Your Best Basil Harvest EverIf you fail to pinch the plant back, it will grow tall and spindly with few, if any, branches. Not only does this mean you’ll have a measly harvest, but your basil won’t taste as delicious either. Basil begins to lose its signature scent as it ages, because the oil READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Growing the Healthiest GreensThe old adage “eat your greens” should be amended to “eat your purple and red greens.” Red and purple vegetables get their coloring from anthocyanins—plant pigments that double as super healthful antioxidants. Growing (and eating!) plants with dark red or purplish pigments is an easy way to add a dose READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: 5 Edible Flowers Worth EatingNasturtiums The prettiest and tastiest of edible flowers! Nasturtiums have a spicy bite, but their underlying floral flavor mellows things out. Tuck them into salads, chop and add to compound butters, or simply snack on them while you are out in the garden! READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Preventing Poor GerminationA couple of weeks ago I sowed three rows of carrots and hardly any of the seeds sprouted. My spotty row of carrots is pictured above—so disappointing! Luckily, there is still plenty of time to sow more. READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Organic Aphid ControlWilli Galloway is the author of Grow Cook Eat: A Food Lover’s Guide to Vegetable Gardening, and she writes about organic vegetable gardening and seasonal cooking on her blog, DigginFood. READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Potting Soil PrimerContainer grown plants need potting soil, but they definitely do not require a mix that contains time-released chemical fertilizers and superabsorbent polymers—ingredients that many common brands include. When you’re shopping for “potting soil” it is important to understand that this term is a bit of a misnomer. Most potting soils READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: How to Harvest Pea ShootsIf you grow peas, it is entirely worthwhile to harvest both their pods and their delicious, delicate greens. The shoots, which are the tender tips of the vines, including the leaves, stems, flower blossoms, and tendrils, make the most fantastic and unexpected salad greens. READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Planting SeedlingsOn the surface, planting seedlings is pretty straightforward: simply remove them from their container and plant them in the ground. But taking extra care really helps. Here’s how to get the little plants get off to a good start: READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: DIY Pea TrellisesPeas grow best when they can twine their tendrils around a trellis, even the so-called bush varieties, which only grow about 3 feet tall. Trellises are fun to build, and some of the most practical and pretty ones can be made with recycled or inexpensive material. READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: How to Grow Baby GreensPlanting a small patch of baby greens is a no-brainer, especially if you consider the economics. A single box of mixed organic baby greens costs almost $6.00 at my supermarket. But for just $2.79 I can buy a packet of my favorite baby greens blend, ‘Paris Market Mix’ from Renee’s READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Vegan FertilizersMany of the most popular organic fertilizers and soil amendments contain animal ingredients such as bone meal, blood meal, and chicken feather meal, fish-based fertilizers, and manures. But never fear, there are plenty of vegan alternatives that will keep your garden growing healthy and strong. READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Biodegradable Seedling ContainersPlanting seedlings in the garden is fun. Dealing with the resulting pile of unrecyclable black plastic containers? Not so much. I have trouble bringing myself to throw plastic away, so the containers stack up in my garden shed until I have a chance to take them back to my favorite READ MORE
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Edible Gardening 101: Deciding When to PlantWhen it comes to growing vegetables, timing is everything. Peppers planted early, when the soil is still cool, tend to languish, while lettuce seedlings set into the ground too late quickly turn bitter and go to seed prematurely. Learning when to plant the vegetables you like to eat takes a READ MORE
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Free Edible Garden PlansWe hope you are as inspired as we are to get started planting a kitchen garden after reading Grow Cook Eat author Willi Galloway’s edible garden guide, “Home-Grown Flavor,” in the April/May 2012 issue of Vegetarian Times. READ MORE








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