Showing posts with label vegetable garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetable garden. Show all posts

The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide: A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia Review

The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide: A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia
Average Reviews:

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I have to give THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS' GUIDE by Stephen Albert a 5-star rating! I was delighted to get my copy of this thorough and knowledgeable vegetable and herb gardening guide (400 jam-packed pages, but not so big I can't actually take it into the garden with me). I have to admit there are a few gardening questions I can't answer. But when it comes to the vegetable garden, this book has brought all of the answers together in one place. Here's what I've found in this book:
* Planting, growing, harvesting, storing, and preparation details for 80 different vegetables and herbs. There are more plants listed here than any other vegetable gardening book I own. Seriously, it's all in this book. Things like each plant's form, height, breadth, root depth, bloom time, season and climate requirements, and soil requirements. Details on seed and transplant planting depth, germination and growing soil temperatures, days to germination and maturity, sowing time, transplanting time, plant spacing, water and light requirements, how to feed and fertilize, crop rotation, propagation, greenhouse growing, and container growing. All of that before you even get to harvest, storage, and kitchen preparation suggestions.
* Each plant is listed alphabetically by common name, but there is a second table of contents which lists each plant alphabetically by its botanical names. (Not to mention, the name of each plant is also listed in Spanish, French, German and several other languages.) In the index, I could find plants cross-referenced by common and scientific names. Now, I can finally understand exactly what I'm getting from the seed catalogs and talk to that lady at the garden center who always uses horticultural names.
* There's a beautiful identifying photograph and description to go with each plant. You could frame these photographs. Now I can finally identify salsify and sorrel at the market.
* Harvest and storage details and suggestions for using each plant in the kitchen.
* All of the measurements in this book are given in both standard and metric conversion. I can actually send this book as a gift to friends living outside of the United States.
* An appendix with a chart of first and last frost dates and the number of days in the growing season for 228 cities in the United States and Canada, and growing charts for the rest of the world.
* A glossary of plant and gardening terms, an index, and a bibliography of other helpful books. The glossary is one of the most complete I've ever seen: very useful!
This isn't a big coffee table book; it's a book I can actually carry with me into the garden.
The author is Stephen Albert and he has gardened all around the country, in Massachusetts, Florida, Iowa, and now in California. He's actually grown all of these plants in real gardens. At the end of the book he even gives his email address so I can ask questions about my first attempt at salsify. I give THE KITCHEN GARDEN GROWERS' GUIDE 5-stars and a golden garden trowel salute.


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A veritable encyclopedia and easy how-to guide on all that is natural and necessary in the world of gardening and small fruit, vegetable, and herb preparation, in The Kitchen Garden Grower's Guide: A practical vegetable and herb garden encyclopedia, Stephen Albert leaves no stone-collard green, leek, or potato-unearthed in this absolutely amazing field guide that greenhorns, old hands, weekend gardeners, and chefs should not be without. From the soil to the plate, this manual is exceptionally penned and easy to follow. It provides answers to basic and in-depth growing questions. It includes how to plant, how to grow and care for crops, how to harvest, how to store, and how to prepare vegetables and herbs. From asparagus and beet greens to Belgian endive and strawberries, this book helps readers organize a small garden close to the kitchen that offers their favorite, fresh-picked-at-the-peak-of-ripeness small crop-and the template on how to orchestrate the effort.

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Designing the New Kitchen Garden: An American Potager Handbook Review

Designing the New Kitchen Garden: An American Potager Handbook
Average Reviews:

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The sub-title for this book might be "A landscape designer dabbles prettily in vegetables" The book is beautifully produced, although I found the strong raking light in some of the photographs actually obscured the plants.
The chapter of historical background is almost worth the price of admission itself (if you're interested in history and the history of gardening) Although somewhat preciously phrased, the author does remind us of the connection of spirit, body, and garden, something we may forget when we in the middle of a vicious battle with cabbage loopers.
But the excursions into real gardens felt to me like a fantasy. If these gardens are meant to be inspiring, they failed with me. Every page I turned reminded me that these gardens are big, and clearly cost a lot of money to build and maintain. I never had a clear sense of the good eating that should be coming out of these gardens. And of course, nothing ever seems to go wrong in these gardens; there is no sense of how the gardeners have learned and evolved their gardens over time.
For a book ostensibly about "American" potager gardening, most of the country was omitted. Including midwest, southern, and western garden would have been a big help.
The design chapter starts off on the wrong foot by discussing a potager garden that was never built. Even worse, it was never built in a large urban space with which few of us will ever have to contend, so I fail to see the point. The second garden design discussed, designed for a small restaurant, also has not been built. The third garden is the author's own, now giving me the uncomfortable feeling that the entire book is a vanity project.
When the winter weather keeps you indoors, this will not a bad book to page through; just don't let it be the only book on your shelf about potager gardening.

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