Pages

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Saving Seeds - ARUGULA

 
photo 2013-06-29_zps315df7e4.jpg

Saving Seeds - ARUGULA

About a month ago I shared with you the health benefits of eating Arugula and a few growing tips - today we are talking about saving Arugula seeds so that you will have many more years of Arugula enjoyment!

photo 001_zps2297896e.jpg

After the Arugula plant has flowered - long spindly pods will start to appear.  These skinny pods will be green at first but then by the end of the summer these pods will be dried and light tan in color.  Cut the stalks of pods when they look like the picture above.

As you can see by the picture below - inside these little pods are the tiny Arugula seeds.
An easy way to release the seeds from the pod is to place the pods into a large paper bag and begin crunching the pods with your hands (wear gloves to protect your hands).  Now, kind of close the top of the bag and then shake.  Keep on shaking until you see many hundreds of seeds in the bottom of the bag. Remove & discard the pod chaff and then place your seeds in a clearly marked smaller paper bag.  Store in a cool dry place until next year.

photo 003_zpsa8aeca8c.jpg

Arugula Recipes on this blog:

1.  Arugula Strawberry Salad with Poppyseed Dressing

2.  Grapes'n Grain Chicken Salad served on a bed of fresh greens including Arugula

3.  Arugula Cranberry Cashew Salad



 
 
 
Photobucket


Linked to:
From the Farm Blog Hop
All My Bloggy Friends
Tuesday with a Twist
HomeAcre Hop
Home & Garden Hop


_______________________________________________________________________

Please checkout this month's wonderful Sponsor!!
"Tree Nursery Online" is a fantastic Wholesale website.  They have Flowering Trees & Shrubs, Evergreen Trees & Shrubs, Vines, Ferns, Mosses - The best quality and at the best wholesale prices. 
(Their sister website for smaller gardeners is "Garden Delights"). 
Tree Nursery Online

(Please click on the ad above)

3 comments:

  1. Sounds like an easy to grow plant. :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. We planted arugula this year, but it bolted and flowered almost immediately. We planted it early the same time as our leaf lettuce. I'm still perplexed about it. Ideas? Thanks for sharing with us at The HomeAcre Hop!

    Please join us again Thursday at:
    http://summersacres.blogspot.com/2013/09/the-homeacre-hop-38-and-soap-giveaway.html

    ~Ann

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Wow - that is very unusual. Was it an unusually warm spring for you? (I'm assuming you planted the Arugula in the spring) - that's the only thing that I can think of. - sorry.

      Delete

Please feel free to leave comments or questions (no question is ever stupid) - They will show up on the blog once I have read through them.
Thank You.