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There are 427 products.

Showing 265-276 of 427 item(s)
Red Onion seeds Ptujski Luk

Red Onion seeds Ptujski Luk

Price €2.05 SKU: MHS 157 (50 S)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>Red Onion seeds Ptujski Luk</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for a Package of 50 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <strong>THE KING OF ONIONS and a European specialty!</strong><br />Ptujski onion is manually grown, picked, and braided in wreaths just as it has been for the past 200 years. Its flavor, pungency, and quality make it one of the best onion varieties. The traditional methods of cultivation used as well as its origin have earned Ptujski onion the Protected Geographical Indication mark, and a place not only on the list of protected Slovenian agricultural products but also of European specialties.<br /><br /><strong>Flavour, origin, tradition</strong><br />Both the gravelly ground and the climate, with its perfect combination of sun and rain, give special pungency to this onion variety. Ptujski lük is perfect for cooking and disintegrates quickly. It also stores well – typically, in a dark and cool place until the spring.<br /><br /> <h3><strong>How do you recognize Ptujski onion?</strong></h3> Its flat, heart shape<br />The reddish-brown to the bright red coloring of its scale leaves<br />Its white flesh, with a purple-reddish tinge and pronounced purple edge<br />Its moderately pungent taste<br />Its strong ‘oniony’ smell
MHS 157 (50 S)
Red Onion seeds Ptujski Luk
Sweet Pepper Seeds California Wonder

Sweet Pepper Seeds...

Price €1.85 SKU: PP 49
,
5/ 5
<h2><span style="text-decoration: underline;" class=""><em><strong>Sweet Pepper Seeds California Wonder</strong></em></span></h2> <h3><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 20<strong> or 100 </strong>seeds.</strong></span></h3> <div>HEIRLOOM. The standard bell pepper for many decades, this 1928 introduction is still the largest open-pollinated, heirloom bell you can grow, and a big improvement over the earlier bells. A perfect stuffing pepper—blocky 4" x 3 1/2", thick-walled, tender and flavorful.</div> <div><strong>Detailed planting instructions:</strong></div> <div class="">Sow seeds indoors, 1/4 inch deep in flats, peat pots or cell packs, 8-10 weeks before you anticipate transplanting outside. Seed germinates best when the soil temperature is 80 F or higher. It will not germinate below 55 F.</div> <div> <p>Keep plants indoors in a warm (70 F during the day, 65 F at night), sunny location. Lack of light will produce leggy, unproductive transplants.</p> <p>Don't be in a rush to transplant outside. Cold temperatures can weaken plants and they may never fully recover. A few days at 60 F to 65 F with reduced water will help harden plants and reduce transplant shock. Over-hardened plants grow slowly after transplanting.</p> </div> <div>Set plants out 2 to 3 weeks after the average last frost when the soil has warmed and the weather has settled. Plant them 12 to 24 inches apart, in rows 24 to 36 inches apart, or spaced about 14 to 16 inches apart in raised beds.</div> <div>Use black plastic and/or row covers to speed soil warming and early growth. Use caution with row covers not to overheat plants and cause them to drop their blossoms.</div> <div>If not using black plastic, mulch plants after they are well established and the soil has warmed to retain moisture and control weeds.</div> <div>Peppers can be temperamental when it comes to setting fruit if temperatures are too hot or too cool. Nighttime temperatures below 60 F or above 75 F can reduce fruit sets.</div> <div>Too much nitrogen fertilizer may promote lush vegetative growth but fewer fruits. Peppers usually respond well to phosphorus fertilizer.</div> <div>Stake tall varieties for earlier and heavier harvest.</div> <div>Peppers need even moisture for the best performance. An even supply can reduce blossom end rot, a disorder caused by lack of calcium.</div> <div> <p>Do not plant in the same spot more than once every 4 years.</p> <p><strong>HARVESTING</strong></p> </div> <div>Make sure the bell peppers are firm and shiny with a crisp texture. Use garden shears to clip the fruits from the plant instead of pulling them off.</div> <div>Pick bell peppers when they are smaller at the beginning of summer. They may be taken when they are the size of a golf ball and frequent picking will encourage near-continuous fruit production. Immature bell peppers are soft and pliable with thin pale walls.</div> <div>Take fully mature bell peppers when they are four to five inches long and have full, well-formed lobes. The older the fruit is, the thicker the skin will be.</div> <div>Allow the bell peppers to ripen to their final color later in the season to get the fruit of different colors. Ripe bell peppers may be yellow, red, orange or purple, depending on the variety. You can continue to harvest bell peppers until the first frost. </div> <div> <p>Store bell peppers at 50 degrees and at least 90 percent humidity, if possible. They should be stored away from other fruits and vegetables because they are sensitive to ethylene gas, which causes them to age faster.</p> <p><strong>SAVING SEEDS</strong></p> </div> <div>Cut your favorite variety of pepper in half. All of the seeds inside are most likely viable and you can use them to grow the same variety of pepper in containers or in a sunny garden spot. Collect the seeds and lay them flat on a paper towel for 24 hours.</div> <div> </div> <div>Label the plastic bag with a permanent marker with the name or variety of the pepper seeds. Place the seeds inside for planting.</div> <div>Keep the seeds in a cool, but not cold, dark area until you are ready to start them in early spring.</div> <script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
PP 49 (20 S)
Sweet Pepper Seeds California Wonder

Variety from Italy
Dieghito Jalapeno Chili Seeds

Dieghito Jalapeno Chili Seeds

Price €2.45 SKU: C 18 D
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5/ 5
<h2><strong>Dieghito Jalapeno Chili Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 5 seeds.</strong></span></h2> The Dieghito Jalapeno (Capsicum annuum) pepper comes to us from Italy. It is reported to be a cross between a Farmers Market Jalapeno and an unknown variety. Or the Italians just do not want us to know what that other variety is.&nbsp;<br><br>As of 2020, it is said to be an F5 generation. The Dieghito Jalapeno chiles ripen from green to red with cracking lines or corking on its exterior skin. The peppers are unique as they have a heart or round shape to them. They are very juicy and the heat ranges from mild to medium.&nbsp;<br><br>The Dieghito Jalapeno peppers are great for roasting, stuffing, salsa, and pickling.&nbsp;<br><br>The flavor is Jalapeno but with more sweetness. The Dieghito Jalapeno chile plants grow up to 1,2 m (4 feet) tall.<br><br>Some of the thickest walled peppers we have ever seen. &nbsp;<br><br>They are very sweet and also very mild with little to no heat at times.<script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
C 18 D (5 S)
Dieghito Jalapeno Chili Seeds
Kleine Rheinländerin Pea Seed (Pisum sativum)

Kleine Rheinländerin Pea...

Price €1.95 SKU: VE 40 (7,5g)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>Kleine Rheinländerin Pea Seed (Pisum sativum)</strong></h2> <h2 class=""><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 40 (7,5g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>Kleine Rheinländerin is a variety of Pea which is a member of the Pisum family. Its botanical name is Pisum sativum 'Kleine Rheinländerin'. This variety is an Vegetable that typically grows as an Annual, which is defined as a plant that matures and completes its lifecycle over the course of a single year. Kleine Rheinländerin is known for growing to a height of approximately 1.55 metres (5.04 feet).</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Kleine Rheinländerin Pea is normally quite a low maintenance plant and is normally very easy to grow - great for beginner gardeners!</p> <script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 40 (7,5g)
Kleine Rheinländerin Pea Seed (Pisum sativum)
Lettuce Seeds May Queen

Lettuce Seeds May Queen

Price €1.95 SKU: PL 4
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5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>Lettuce Seeds May Queen (Lactuca sativa)</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;" class=""><strong>Price for package of 1000 (1g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>MAY QUEEN LETTUCE (Lactuca sativa), more modernly called May King, is a 19th English heirloom butterhead was grown in the great glasshouses of the Victorian era. Early maturing, tender, with a sweet flavor, it is still a favorite across the Pond for growing in greenhouses and cold frames and in the garden as it can withstand ground frosts. The leaves are lime green with a reddish tinge and the small firm creamy hearts have a pink tinge. Very fetching on the salad plate! 50 days. 50 seeds.</p> <p>GROWING TIPS: Lettuces are my absolute favorite - I dedicate a lot of space to them in my garden because I like variety and they can be really beautiful kissed by the sun. Direct sow in early spring and late summer. The more space each lettuce has to grow the larger it becomes. If you are sowing for quick greens, don't bother to thin - just use your scissors to clips what you need for dinner as it will continue to grow.</p> <p>Lettuces love cool (not cold) weather and respond to well-prepared soil and regular weeding and watering. Relatively pest-free, with the exception of slugs (easily combatted with a barrier of ashes or copper wire) and furry invaders (chicken ware cloches work best there).</p> <script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
PL 4 (1g)
Lettuce Seeds May Queen

Variety from Italy
Bean Seeds Merveille de Piemonte 2.5 - 1

Bean Seeds Merveille de...

Price €2.50 SKU: VE 138 (3g)
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5/ 5
<div id="idTab1" class="rte"> <h2 id="short_description_content"><strong>Vegetable Bean Seeds Merveille de Piemonte</strong></h2> <h2 class=""><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 (3g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>A spectacular French Bean that loses its purple markings in the pan and turns green. These long beans (approx. 16-20 cm) taste terrific! They taste great as a cooked dry bean too!</p> <p>So-called 'stringless' French Beans are considered the tastiest. It is actually hard to find them with 'string' nowadays as most modern cultivars are stringless.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>There are also yellow French Beans which a called Butter Beans when dried - not surprisingly because of the colour. They have a somewhat milder flavour than the green variety.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>French Beans are tastiest when eaten shortly after picking but they will last several days in the fridge. Chop into 2 cm pieces and steam or boil - but not too long as they are best when still crunchy. A short turn in the wok is great too! French Beans freeze well too although they may loose some of their crispiness. Chop finely and blanche them before freezing.</p> <p><strong>Special Directions For Short Season Climates </strong></p> <p><strong>SOWING:&nbsp;</strong>Plant outdoors in late spring after weather has warmed and all dan-ger of frost has passed. Plant 4 to 6 seeds per pole in hills. Plant seeds on their side covering seed with 1 to 1 1/2 inches of fine soil firmed down.&nbsp;</p> <p><strong>SPACING:</strong> Provide 2 1/2 to 3 feet between hills. When planted in rows space rows 3 feet apart.</p> <p><strong>THINNING:</strong> Thin to 3 strongest plants per pole in hills, when they are about 4 inches tall. Thin to 4 to 6 inches apart in rows.</p> <p><strong>GERMINATION:&nbsp;</strong>1 to 2 weeks depending upon soil and weather conditions. Keep soil moderately moist during germination.</p> </div><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 138 (3g)
Bean Seeds Merveille de Piemonte 2.5 - 1
Bean Seeds Jerusalem (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)

Bean Seeds Jerusalem...

Price €1.35 SKU: VE 139 (4g)
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5/ 5
<div id="idTab1" class="rte"> <h2><strong>Bean Seeds&nbsp;Jerusalem (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 (4g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <div> <div>JERUSALEM POLE BEAN (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is a very fine bean heirloom with broad flat yellow pods and brown beans. Very early to bear and the beans are delicious picked young and cooked whole. Also used in minestrone and for fresh shelling beans This is the white seeded variety. Pole habit, 58-72 days.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>GROWING TIP: All beans and peas are legumes and benefit from "inoculating" with rhizobacteria. These bacteria do the work of taking gaseous nitrogen from the air and "fixing" or concentrating it in pink root nodules which then slough off, adding nitrogen to the soil in a form other plants can take up as a nutrient. Inoculating your beans and peas will increase germination, and the health of your plants, helping them growing large roots and thus healthier plants. Growing pole beans with corn provides an extra shot of nitrogen to the corn, a wonderful natural symbiotic relationship that the Native Americans understood very well. You will see a big difference in overall results. Healthy legumes should also be turned under the soil when production ends as they are excellent green manure for your next crops.</div> </div> </div><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 139 (4g)
Bean Seeds Jerusalem (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)

Variety from India
Mung Bean Seeds (Vigna radiata) 1.5 - 3

Mung Bean Seeds (Vigna...

Price €1.80 SKU: VE 140 (2g)
,
5/ 5
<h2 id="short_description_content"><strong>Mung Bean Seeds (Vigna radiata)</strong></h2> <h2 class=""><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 30 (2g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>The mung bean (Vigna radiata), alternatively known as the moong bean, green gram, Lentil, but not Mungo, is a plant species in the legume family. Native to the Indian subcontinent, the mung bean is mainly cultivated today in India, China, and Southeast Asia. It is also cultivated in hot, dry regions in Southern Europe and the Southern United States. It is used as an ingredient in both savory and sweet dishes.</p> <p><strong>Description</strong></p> <p>The English word mung is derived from the Hindi word मूंग Moong derived from the Sanskrit word मुद्ग (mudga). In Tamil it is பாசி பருப்பு (paasi paruppu). In Telugu language it is called పెసర పప్పు (Pesara pappu). In Kannada, it is ಹೆಸರು ಬೇಳೆ (hesaru bele).</p> <p><strong>Taxonomy</strong></p> <p>They are one of many species recently moved from the genus Phaseolus to Vigna, and is still often seen incorrectly cited as Phaseolus aureus or Phaseolus radiatus.</p> <p><strong>Uses</strong></p> <p>Mung beans are commonly used in various cuisines across Asia.</p> <p>Whole beans and mung bean paste</p> <p>Whole cooked mung beans are generally prepared from dried beans by boiling until they are soft. Mung beans are light yellow in color when their skins are removed. Mung bean paste can be made by dehulling, cooking, and pulverizing the beans to a dry paste.</p> <p>Although whole mung beans are also occasionally used in Indian cuisine, beans without skins are more commonly used; but in Kerala, whole mung beans are commonly boiled to make a dry preparation often served with rice gruel (kanji). Dehulled mung beans can also be used in a similar fashion as whole beans for the purpose of making sweet soups. Mung beans in some regional cuisines of India are stripped of their outer coats to make mung dal. In Tamil Nadu, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh, steamed whole beans are seasoned with spices and fresh grated coconut in a preparation called sundal. In south and north Indian states, mung beans are also eaten as pancakes. They are soaked in water for six to 12 hours (the higher the temperature, the lesser soaking time). Then they are ground into fine paste along with ginger and salt. Then pancakes are made on a very hot griddle. These are usually eaten for breakfast. This provides high quality protein that is rare in most Indian regional cuisines. Pongal or kichdi is another recipe that is made with rice and mung beans without skin. In Kerala, it is commonly used to make the parippu preparation in the Travancore region (unlike Cochin and Malabar, where toor dal, tuvara parippu, is used). It is also used, with coconut milk and jaggery, to make a type of payasam.</p> <p>In Chinese cuisine, whole mung beans are used to make a tángshuǐ, or dessert, otherwise literally translated, "sugar water", called lǜdòu tángshuǐ, which is served either warm or chilled. In Indonesia, they are made into a popular dessert snack called es kacang hijau, which has the consistency of a porridge. The beans are cooked with sugar, coconut milk, and a little ginger.</p> <p>In Hong Kong, dehulled mung beans and mung bean paste are made into ice cream or frozen ice pops. Mung bean paste is used as a common filling for Chinese mooncakes in East China and Taiwan. Also in China, the boiled and shelled beans are used as filling in glutinous rice dumplings eaten during the dragon boat festival (端午节).[4] The beans may also cooked until soft, blended into a liquid, sweetened, and served as a beverage, popular in many parts of China.</p> <p>In the Philippines, ginisáng monggó (sautéed mung bean stew), also known as monggó guisado or balatong, is a savoury stew of whole mung beans with shrimp or fish. It is traditionally served on Fridays of Lent, when the majority Roman Catholic Filipinos traditionally abstain from meat. Variants of ginisáng monggó may also be made with chicken or pork.</p> <p>Mung bean paste is also a common filling of pastries known as hopia (or bakpia) popular in Indonesia, the Philippines and further afield in Guyana (where it is known as black eye cake) and originating from southern China</p> <p><strong>Bean sprouts</strong></p> <p>Mung bean sprouts are germinated by leaving them in water for four hours of daytime light and spending the rest of the day in the dark. Mung bean sprouts can be grown under artificial light for four hours over the period of a week. They are usually simply called "bean sprouts". However, when bean sprouts are called for in recipes, it generally refers to mung bean or soybean sprouts.</p> <p>Mung bean sprouts are stir-fried as a Chinese vegetable accompaniment to a meal, usually with garlic, ginger, spring onions, or pieces of salted dried fish to add flavour. Uncooked bean sprouts are used in filling for Vietnamese spring rolls, as well as a garnish for phở. They are a major ingredient in a variety of Malaysian and Peranakan cuisine, including char kway teow, hokkien mee, mee rebus, and pasembor. In Korea, slightly cooked mung bean sprouts, called sukjunamul (hangul: 숙주나물), are often served as a side dish. They are blanched (placed into boiling water for less than a minute), immediately cooled in cold water, and mixed with sesame oil, garlic, salt, and often other ingredients. In the Philippines, mung bean sprouts are made into lumpia rolls called lumpiang togue.</p> <p>In northern China and Korea, soybean sprouts, called kongnamul (hangul: 콩나물) in Korean, are more widely used in a variety of dishes.</p> <p><strong>Starch</strong></p> <p>Mung bean starch, which is extracted from ground mung beans, is used to make transparent cellophane noodles (also known as bean thread noodles, bean threads, glass noodles, fensi (粉絲), tung hoon (冬粉), miến, bún tàu, or bún tào). Cellophane noodles become soft and slippery when they are soaked in hot water. A variation of cellophane noodles, called mung bean sheets or green bean sheets, are also available. In Korea, a jelly called nokdumuk (hangul: 녹두묵; also called cheongpomuk; hangul: 청포묵) is made from mung bean starch; a similar jelly, colored yellow with the addition of gardenia coloring, is called hwangpomuk (hangul: 황포묵). In northern China, mung bean jelly is called liangfen (凉粉, meaning chilled bean jelly), which is very popular food during summer. Jidou liangfen is another flavor of mung bean jelly food in Yunnan, in southern China.</p> <p>Mung batter is used to make crepes named pesarattu in Andhra Pradesh, India and pancakes named Bindaetteok in Korea.</p> <p><strong>History of domestication and cultivation</strong></p> <p>The mung bean was domesticated in India, where its progenitor (Vigna radiata subspecies sublobata) occurs wild.[8][9] Archaeological evidence has turned up carbonized mung beans on many sites in India. Areas with early finds include the eastern zone of the Harappan civilization in Punjab and Haryana, where finds date back about 4500 years, and South India in the modern state of Karnataka where finds date back more than 4000 years. Some scholars therefore infer two separate domestications in the northwest and south of India. In South India there is evidence for evolution of larger-seeded mung beans 3500 to 3000 years ago. By about 3500 years ago mung beans were widely cultivated throughout India. Cultivated mung beans later spread from India to China and Southeast Asia. Archaeobotanical research at the site of Khao Sam Kaeo in southern Thailand indicates that mung beans had arrived in Thailand by at least 2200 years ago. Finds on Pemba Island indicate that during the era of Swahili trade, in the 9th or 10th century, mung beans also came to be cultivated in Africa.</p><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 140 (2g)
Mung Bean Seeds (Vigna radiata) 1.5 - 3
“Pinto” Bean Seeds (Phaseolus vulgaris) 2 - 3

Pinto Bean Seeds (Phaseolus...

Price €2.00 SKU: VE 141 (8g)
,
5/ 5
<div id="idTab1" class="rte"> <h2 id="short_description_content"><strong>“Pinto” Bean Seeds (Phaseolus vulgaris)</strong></h2> <h2 class=""><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 20 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>The pinto bean is a variety of common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris). It is the most common bean in the United States[1] and northwestern Mexico,[2] and is most often eaten whole in broth or mashed and refried. Either whole or mashed, it is a common filling for burritos. The young pods may also be harvested and cooked as green pinto beans.</p> <p>In Spanish, they are called frijol pinto, literally "speckled bean", and in South America it is known as the "poroto frutilla", literally "strawberry bean". In Portuguese, they are called feijão carioca in Brazil (literally "carioca bean") and feijão catarino in Portugal. It is named for its mottled skin (compare pinto horse), hence it is a type of mottled bean.</p> <p>This is the bean most commonly used for refried beans (fresh or canned) and in many dishes. Rice and pinto beans served with cornbread or corn tortillas are often a staple meal where meat is unavailable; the amino acids in this combination make it a complete protein source. This variety is often used in chili con carne, although the kidney bean, black bean, and many others may also be used in other locales.</p> <p>Pinto beans are commonly eaten beans in Brazilian cuisine (legumes, mainly common bean, are a staple food everywhere in the country, cultivated since 3000 BCE, along with starch-rich foods, such as rice, manioc, pasta and other wheat-based products, polenta and other corn-based products, potatoes and yams).</p> <p>In the southeastern part of the United States, pinto beans were once a staple of the people, especially during the winter months. Some churches in rural areas still sponsor "pinto bean suppers" for social gatherings and fund raisers.</p> <p>The alubia pinta alavesa, or the "Alavese pinto bean", a red variety of the pinto bean, originated in Añana,[3] a town and municipality located in the province of Álava, in the Basque Country of northern Spain. In October, the Feria de la alubia pinta alavesa (Alavese pinto bean fair) is celebrated in Pobes.</p> </div><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 141 (8g)
“Pinto” Bean Seeds (Phaseolus vulgaris) 2 - 3

Variety from Serbia

Pole Beans Seeds 'Cer Starozagorski'

Pole Beans Seeds Cer...

Price €1.55 SKU: VE 142 (6g)
,
5/ 5
<h2><strong>Pole Beans Seeds 'Cer Starozagorski'</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;" class=""><strong>Price for Package of 15 (6g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <div>A very fine old Serbia heirloom with broad flat green pods (15cm long) and dark beans. Very early to bear and the beans are delicious picked young and cooked whole. Also used in minestrone and for fresh shelling beans This is the dark seeded variety, height 50 - 60 cm. &nbsp;58-72 days.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>GROWING TIP: All beans and peas are legumes and benefit from "inoculating" with rhizobacteria. These bacteria do the work of taking gaseous nitrogen from the air and "fixing" or concentrating it in pink root nodules which then slough off, adding nitrogen to the soil in a form other plants can take up as a nutrient. Inoculating your beans and peas will increase germination, and the health of your plants, helping them growing large roots and thus healthier plants. Growing pole beans with corn provides an extra shot of nitrogen to the corn, a wonderful natural symbiotic relationship that the Native Americans understood very well. You will see a big difference in overall results. Healthy legumes should also be turned under the soil when production ends as they are excellent green manure for your next crops.</div><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 142 (6g)
Pole Beans Seeds 'Cer Starozagorski'

Variety from Italy
Borlotto Lingua Di Fuoco Nano Bean Seeds (Bush)

Borlotto Lingua Di Fuoco...

Price €1.95 SKU: VE 146 (5.5g)
,
5/ 5
<h2 class=""><strong>Borlotto Lingua Di Fuoco Nano Bean Seeds (dwarf)</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>Price for Package of 10 seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>Borlotto Lingua di Fuoco (traditional Italian variety) sounds more like an opera with aphrodisiac qualities rather than one of the eldest varieties of Borlotto bean.</p> <p>Lingua di Fuoco literally translates as ‘Tongue of Fire’.</p> <p>Borlotto Lingua Di Fuoco' is a mid-early Bean, with a long, inflated pod containing seven cream coloured beans. The height of the plant is 45-50 centimetres and the pods themselves have a length of 14-15 cm. The grains are large and easily removed from the pods.</p> <p>Loved for their excellent flavour, colour and versatility, Borlotto is the most commonly used heritage bean in Italy for cooking, they are basically the Italian version of kidney beans. This dual-purpose variety can be eaten young in the pod either raw or cooked or can be shelled and used as a bean.</p> <p>The pods look wonderful in the garden and are stunning chopped into salads. Its gorgeous colour is almost whimsical as you break open the pods to retrieve the plump beans inside. With a creamy taste and a soft nutty consistency, it is quite the most beautiful bean in the world.</p> <p><strong>Where to grow:</strong></p> <p>Borlotto beans are grown just like runner beans. They prefer to grow in moist, fertile soil in a sunny, sheltered spot away from strong winds. Prepare the soil for planting by digging over and adding plenty of organic material, this will help to improve the soil's moisture-retaining ability and fertility.</p> <p>Beans can also be grown in pots. Choose pots at least 45cm (18in) in diameter and make sure there are plenty of drainage holes. Fill with a mixture of equal parts loam-based compost and loam-free compost.</p> <p><strong>Supporting plants:</strong></p> <p>If you wish to train the plant vertically, create support before planting. Either make a wigwam with canes, lashed together with string at the top, or create a parallel row of canes, which have their tops tightly secured to a horizontal cane. Add to the ornamental appeal of wigwams by planting a few fragrant sweetpeas alongside them. These will twine together as they climb, attracting pollinating insects to the beans, and providing flowers to pick at the same time as the crop</p> <p>Sowing: Sow indoors late April and May, outdoors in late May to June.</p> <p>Even when temperatures are not below freezing, cold air can damage bean plants, so don't plant too early. Plant outdoors only after the last frosts, May onwards. Sowing seeds early indoors gives a faster and more reliable germination rate. Beans sown directly outside often germinate poorly or get attacked by slugs.</p> <p>Avoid problems by sowing seeds in late April and May in pots or root trainers in the greenhouse. Robust young plants will be ready to plant outside within about 5 weeks, growing away far quicker than outdoor sowings.</p> <p>Sow a single bean seed, 4cm (1.5in) deep, in root trainers or into a 7.5cm (3in) pot filled with multipurpose compost. Water well, label and place on a sunny windowsill to germinate. Seedlings will be ready to plant out after about three weeks. Before planting, put in a cold frame to acclimatise.</p> <p>Alternatively, beans can be sown directly in the soil between the second half of May and the middle of June. Plant two seeds next to your support about 5cm (2in) deep. Water well. After germination remove the smaller and less robust of the two young plants. As they grow, ensure the plants continue to twine around their canes.</p> <p><strong>Cultivation:</strong></p> <p>Having shallow roots regular and plentiful watering is vital. Whilst they will prove drought tolerant, beans should be watered particularly heavily, twice a week in dry weather, both when the flower buds appear and once they're open, ensure maximum pod development. Mulch when conditions are dry.</p> <p>Don’t hoe around bean plants too deeply or you may damage the roots.</p> <p>Beans capture nitrogen from the air, so make sure the soil contains the other essential ingredients, phosphorus and potassium. So for the fertiliser use something like 10-20-10. They leave the soil nitrogen-enriched even after harvest</p> <p><strong>Harvesting: 55 days</strong></p> <p>Ready for harvesting as green pods after 55 days, or shelling semi-dry after 70 to 80 days. The more you pick, the more they produce. Most should bear pods from late July and cropping of all types can continue until the first frosts, or longer if plants are protected.</p> <p>Leave the pods on the plant until the shells have changed colour from green to a fully white and red colour. Check that beans inside have turned from green to similar colour to shells. Harvest and shell the beans</p> <p><strong>Storing:</strong></p> <p>The beans will store best if you remove the pods, spread them on trays and place them in a warm dry room for a few days to dry out completely before storing them in clean jars in a cool dry place. Discard any that are discoloured or damaged. The beans will then keep for a few years. Check them over periodically to make sure no insects have got in as you would with any store cupboard food.</p> <p>To cook the dried beans, they will need soaking first, they are best left overnight in a big bowl of water. While the soaking is not strictly necessary, it shortens cooking time and results in more evenly textured beans. In addition, discarding one or more batches of soaking water leaches out hard-to-digest complex sugars that can cause flatulence.</p> <p>Before using in a recipe, boil the soaked beans for at least 45 minutes, or boil for ten minutes, tip off the water and add fresh water, then bring to the boil again and boil for at least another 30 to 45 minutes. Don’t add salt to these first boilings as it can make the beans rather hard.</p> <p><strong>Origin:</strong></p> <p>Phaseolus vulgaris, the common bean, is a herbaceous annual plant domesticated in the ancient Andes and now grown worldwide for its edible bean, popular both dry and as a green bean. The leaf is occasionally used as a leaf vegetable, and the straw is used for fodder.</p> <p>The common bean is a highly variable species with a long history. Bush varieties form erect bushes 20 to 60cm (8 to 24in) tall, while pole or running varieties form vines 180 to 270cm (6 to 9ft) tall.</p> <p><strong>Nomenclature:</strong></p> <p>Borlotto beans are known as Saluggia Beans or Salugia in Piedmontese.</p> <p>Saluggia is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Vercelli in the Italian region Piedmont, located about 30 km northeast of Turin, it is renowned in Italy and abroad for the production of beans.</p> <p>In poorer areas of Italy where meat dishes were few and far between, beans were known as 'carne dei poveri’ meaning ‘the meat of the poor’. Funny how times change!</p> <p>Occasionally they are referred to as cranberry beans, from their mottled cranberry-red and ivory markings.</p> <p><strong>Translation:</strong></p> <p>In Italian, Borlotto is the singular form, while Borlotti is plural</p> <p>Fagiolo means bean, while Fagioli means beans.</p> <p>Nano means 'dwarf' and is the singular form, while Nani is plural</p><script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
VE 146 (5.5g)
Borlotto Lingua Di Fuoco Nano Bean Seeds (Bush)
Mirzachul, Gulabi, Torpedo Melon Seeds Seeds Gallery - 6

Mirzachul, Gulabi, Torpedo...

Price €2.95 SKU: V 135
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5/ 5
<h2><strong>MIRZACHUL, GULABI, TORPEDO Melon Seeds</strong></h2> <h2><span style="color: #ff0000;" class=""><strong>Price for Package of 25 (1g) seeds.</strong></span></h2> <p>There are unique products that can be bought only in Russia. And most importantly, delicious melon-torpedo. It is called the torpedo for its elongated shape. Melon torpedo has been known for several centuries. In Uzbekistan, it is called Mirzachul melon. It is grown in the area Mirzachul Uzbekistan and Kazakhstan in the surrounding area.</p> <p>In Central Asia, are grown in the world’s most delicious melon. In Uzbekistan there are more than 150 varieties of melon.</p> <p>Uzbek melon torpedo lends itself well to transport. It is available in large quantities in Russia. Here you can buy from July to October.</p> <p>If the melon cut, it can be seen in the delicate white flesh is sweet and juicy large melon seeds Mirzachul: Fairy melon flavor just turns his head and leads you into ecstasy.</p> <p>According to some reports, melon seeds, and work to improve the potency of the prostate gland.</p> <p>The size of a melon-torpedo can reach nearly two feet in length:</p> <p>The weight of the Uzbek melon torpedo can reach 8-9 kg or more:</p> <p>Uzbek melon-torpedo only grows in Uzbekistan and southern Kazakhstan. It is very demanding to light and heat. To grow in colder areas in Russia launched the melon-grade torpedo “Rainbow”, but it is inferior in flavor, taste and size.</p> <p>The farmers who came from the Soviet Union, Uzbek melon-grown torpedo in the United States in the states of California and Arizona. It should be noted that this melon cultivation involves a significant risk of losing the crop. This variety may be affected with powdery mildew. In addition, when excessive irrigation during fruiting, the fruit may burst. So I do not recommend trying to grow a melon Mirzachul right on a huge field, not to get a big loss.</p> <p>Melons should not be planted close to cucumbers, as a result of cross-pollination in melon can get a taste of cucumber.</p> <p>The seeds of the Uzbek melon-torpedo should be kept 2-3 years before you plant them. Otherwise, on the plants are mostly male flowers.</p> <h2><span style="color: #07542a;"><a href="https://www.si-seeds.com/en/home/how-to-grow-melons.html" target="_blank" class="btn btn-default" rel="noreferrer noopener"><span style="color: #07542a;">How to grow melons</span></a></span></h2> <script src="//cdn.public.n1ed.com/G3OMDFLT/widgets.js"></script>
V 135 (25 S)
Mirzachul, Gulabi, Torpedo Melon Seeds Seeds Gallery - 6