Learn About the Vegetables that Grow in Our Gardens
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Transcript Learn About the Vegetables that Grow in Our Gardens
Vegetables in the
Ford Garden
The Written Word
Aquaponics
Aquaponics combines aquaculture
with hydroponics.
Fish produce ammonia (NH), which
bacteria convert to nitrate (NH3).
The water is sent to plants, which
absorb nutrients that they need.
The water returned to the fish.
Mexico: Aztecs built rafts
(chinampas). Waste from canals
and cities irrigated the plants.
Asia: Farmers combined rice in
paddies with fish to grow both.
Spinach:
Spinacia oleracea
Vitamins A, C, E, K, calcium for eyes and brain.
More iron than meat !
Too bad Popeye ate out of
a can. Loses color and
vitamins when processed.
Yummy in salads.
Likes cool weather. Nearly
all grown out West.
Origin: Persia, Nepal
Aquaponics
Will nitrogen grow plants
better in the soil or the
water ?
What bacteria are best for
plants? What do they do?
How do fish help plants and
plants help fish?
Is this a new idea or has it
worked for millions of
years?
Can this knowledge help us
grow food in the city?
Can it feed people who
don’t have enough water?
Taro Family-Araceae
Tropical plant, grown for
its roots (corms), leaves.
African and Asian staple,
starchy like potato.
Origin: India - one of the
early cultivated plants.
Toxic when raw. Baked
roasted, boiled. Sugars
are sweet, nutty.
Called dasheen, gabi,
elephant ears, name,
yam, cocoyam, inhame.
Radish:
Raphanus sativus
Root crop, same as beets,
garlic, potato, carrots.
A bit bitter. Grown for oil.
Rich in B6, ascorbic acid,
potassium.
Grows in 30 days.
Cultivated thousands of
years ago in China and
Greece – here in 1629.
Tomato:
Lycopersicon
Romans called it wolf peach.
Italians: golden apple.
90% comes from the West
and sprayed.
7,500 varieties: really a fruit.
Grown in greenhouses in
cool climates.
Served in salads and cooked,
as in pizza, sauces.
Like most veggies, 90%
water.
Origin: South America
Corn: Zea mays
No. 1 US crop. Used to produce
eggs, milk, meat, fuel, cooking
oil, whiskey, dog food, plastic.
Major source of starch.
Sweetens cereals, tonic, peanut
butter. Too much sugar !
Yellow, red, pink, black, and
blue. Kernels grow on ears,
protected by silk in a husk.
Origin: Mexico 9,000 years ago.
Called maize.
Collards:
Brassica
oleracea
Leafy like cabbage, kale,
broccoli. Blue green leaves.
Slight bitter taste. .
Southern favorite. Loves hot
weather and the cold of late
autumn. Flavor enhanced by
light frost.
High in fiber, vitamin C, counters cancer, virus, bacteria.
Also called berza, couve.
Origin: Asia Minor
Pea : Pisum sativum
Edible seeds grow six feet in
pods. Tendrils help it stand.
Leaves have 1-3 leaflets.
White flowers, purple
blossoms.
Used in soups, salads, snacks.
High: protein, vitamins A, C.
Cousin of beans and peanuts.
Mendel used them to found
study of genetics.
Origin: Georgia (5,000 BCE)
Bean: Fabaceae
High in protein. Can be stored
for years. Soaking revives.
Some boiled to destroy toxin.
4,000 types; kidney, soy green,
pole, string, snap, refried,
black, pinto, etc.
Beans, beans, the magical fruit.
The more you eat, the more you toot.
The more you toot, the better you feel.
Lets have beans with every meal !
Origin: Mid-East, Americas
Long Bean
Vigna unguiculata
Grows to three feet: tastes best
at 18 inches.
Used in casseroles, stir-fry,
soups. Blanch and fry with
garlic and olive oil.
Called yard-long, asparagus
snake bean, cow pea, bora.
Same plant family as blackeyed pea.
Good source of protein, vitamin
A and C, thiamin, iron, folate,
phosphorus, potassium,
magnesium, manganese.
Blueberry:
Vaccinium
Perennial: grows on a bush.
Turns from green to purple to
blue.
Low-bush benefit from fires.
Pruned or burned every two
years to manage pests.
Maine crop is largest lowbush: uses 50,000 beehives.
Helps with infections, strokes,
cognition, blood pressure.
Canada’s largest fruit crop.
Bok Choy:
Brassica rapa
Related to cabbage, turnip;
Studied in Ming dynasty for
medicinal qualities;
Pekinensis: broad leaves with
head;
Chinensis: no head, more like
celery or mustard;
Winter-hardy
In small amounts, may
prevent cancer. Toxic in large
amounts.
Beets:
Beta vulgaris
Red-purple, white-red roots.
Bleeds during cooking. Sweet
taste – made into sugar.
Roots crunchy and buttery.
Leaves are bitter, can be
boiled.
Made into soup (borscht).
Lowers blood pressure, fights
tumors, laxative.
Rich in vitamins & minerals.
Origin: No. Africa 2,000 BCE
Chives
Allium schoenoprasum
Smallest of onions,
perennial.
Stems serve as leaves.
Repels insects, attracts
bees.
Rich in vitamins A and C,
calcium and iron.
Cut back, it continues to
grow.
Its use dates back 5,000
years.
Carrots:
Daucus carota
Favorite of Bugs Bunny. Will
eating carrots improve your
eyesight? High energy food.
Orange, white, yellow, purple,
red. The root is eaten. crunchy,
sweet. Feathery leaves bitter
and toxic.
Made into juice, cake, pudding.
Helps with digestion, parasites,
constipation.
Origin: Asia, Middle East
Pepper: Capsicum annuum
Comes out of the flower.
Natives used it as seasoning.
In tropics, grows several
season. Here an annual.
A thick, fleshy wall
surrounds the seeds like
fruit; wall is eaten.
Hot peppers are jalapeno
and habanera. Eat at own
risk !
Origin: South America
Eggplant: Solanum melongena
Large, egg-shaped. Purple
variety in U.S. since 1860.
Low in vitamins / calories.
White, brown, yellow, or
striped fruits.
Grow in tropics. Fruit grows
out of gray-green hairy leaves
as large as a football.
Some thought it caused bad
breath, madness, leprosy,
cancer.
Origin: Northern India
Cauliflower:
Brassica oleracea
Looks like broccoli, opens
outward with green florets,
white flowers.
Loves cool, moist climate.
Heavy leaves protect flowers
from sun.
Low in fat, high in vitamin C,
fiber, and carbohydrates.
Cancer-reducer?
Eaten raw, cooked, pickled.
Origin: Asia Minor
Lettuce: Lactuca sativa
Used in salads; few calories.
High in calcium, iron and
vitamin A.
Types: Romaine, Bibb,
Iceberg, Chinese.
Large leaves grow close to
the ground on short stems.
Dislikes dryness.
Important farm crop, mainly
grown out West.
Origin: Middle East as early
as 550 BCE.
Cabbage: Brassica oleracea
Easy to grow, frost-hardy.
Lots of vitamin C.
Family: cabbage, broccoli,
cauliflower, Brussel sprouts.
Types: white, red, savoy.
Savoy is wrinkled. White
cabbage (pale green) eaten
in salads, cooked, pickled as
sauerkraut.
Problems: snails, slugs,
worms.
Origin: Europe, Mediterranean. Called “wild mustard.”