I grow cucumbers, lettuce, tomatoes, cherry tomatoes, carrots, squash, onions, green onions. I also use to make pickled cucumbers & onions like grandma used to make. Very refreshing on a hot summer day. Be sure to mix this together at least 24 hrs before you want to serve it as it needs to sit overnight.
Pickled Cucumbers & Onions
2-3 cucumbers sliced
1 red or white onion sliced & separated
salt & pepper to taste
2-3 T sugar
Place all of the above in a quart canning jar. Fill canning jar about 1/3 full with white vinegar the rest of the way with water. Shake well to mix sugar. Chill overnight.
2007-03-18 11:51:41
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Cucumbers of any variety, tomatoes and bell pepper are the most easily grown. Lettuce tends to be a bit contrary. Radishes are also easily grown in home garden. Zucchini is also a nice vegetable for a salad or to use for dips.
2007-03-18 11:49:47
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answer #2
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answered by don n 6
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Houston area.
I grow Burpee Burpless cucumbers and they grow great.
It's too hot for lettuce now, so I'm not expecting lettuce to do well, but I've had luck in cooler weather with meuslin and greens.
Radishes, green beans, any beans or peas do really great.
I hear sweet potatoes are easy to grow, but I haven't tried them yet.
Herbs do very well in pots. Cilantro is picky. Oregano, rosemary and chives are great.
Peppers are great too. They do well before and after the summer heat sets in. In really hot weather, they take a siesta. Doesn't everybody?
2007-03-18 11:38:11
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answer #3
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answered by Konswayla 6
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For salads I like to grow the basic things like lettuce, tomatoes, spring onions, radish and cucumber.
I like Marketmore cucumbers as they are suitable for outdoor growing, and are only 10 to 15 cm long - just enough for one or two.
I grow cress indoors with mustard.
I also grow lots of herbs including chives, and one of my favourites for the flowers is borage, a beautiful blue.
2007-03-19 01:01:30
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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What do you like? i desire to recommend perusing the Territorial Seed Co. catalog, the two on-line or the paper catalog. they seem to be a business enterprise from Oregon and that they focus on short-season greens that boost nicely in the Pacific Northwest. there is likewise an superb e book you ought to have the skill to discover on the library observed as Vegetable Gardening West of the Cascades with the help of Steve Solomon. each and every of the counsel in the front is clever, however the area in the lower back is my favourite - it is going veggie with the help of veggie and describes while to plant, the thank you to plant, the thank you to reap, etc. Lettuce is easy, as are peas and snap beans. Zucchini or summer season squash are an basic one - merely harvest them till now they get too huge. no person needs a great zucchini! Tomatoes, wintry climate squash (ninety-day becoming season or much less), beets, even eggplant if it rather is a short season form. I stay in North Bend and on celebration we've even had fulfillment with watermelon and cantaloupe, yet those are some distance riskier. Artichokes do nicely, as do onions. in case you desire to start suited away, you will ought to build a cold physique. Lettuce and spinach will boost in wintry climate; little else will. merely make advantageous your veggie beds have a minimum of 8 hours of finished-solar exposure in the summer season, or you are going to have problems.
2016-10-19 00:39:32
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answer #5
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answered by Erika 4
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a breed called burbless is quiet poplar cucumber to grow out side in the UK radish beetroot tomato and a land cress grow in a pot is very good celery but that takes a lot of work carrots and to avoid root fly try growing them in a pot to Little gem is the lettuce you are asking about flowers could be nasturtiums i also grow lavender and rosemary which i add to cakes lovely Victorian idea
2007-03-18 11:39:47
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answer #6
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answered by old-bag 3
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my mother grows crunchy cucumbers, delicious HUGE tomatoes, lots of herbal plants, green bell peppers, eggplants and she even grows green beans. All these vegtables have great tastes especially in a vegtable salad.
2007-03-18 11:41:37
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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You can grow them all and quite easily. Most baby leaf lettuces are very easy just plant while it is still cold and harvest all spring and early summer. They die in summer heat in many places. Plant again late July or early August for Fall crop.
2007-03-18 11:40:03
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answer #8
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answered by Pixil 3
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i know this has nothing to do with your question and i'm sorry but if you grow tulips you can eat the petals in a salad... i preffer to grow flowers over vegetables...
2007-03-18 14:15:59
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answer #9
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answered by Prada Marfa 6
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Grow baby spinach, maybe carrots. And when you eat the yummy salad, put dried cranberries on it.
2007-03-18 11:33:39
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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