Winter
salads:
The easiest,
fastest growing (relatively speaking!) and most productive crops you can grow
in winter are salad leaves. There’s a wide choice, including:
Land cress:
has a strong, assertive flavour, a little like water cress. Sow by late August
/ early September for winter leaves – it’s perennial so will produce leaves all
year round.
Winter
purslane or claytonia: a succulent winter leaf, packed with vitamin C.
Attractive round leaves, that also produce pretty and very unusual white
flowers in the spring. Sow late August / early September.
Pea and
broad bean shoots: one of the fastest growing and easiest crops to grow in
winter. Sow up to the end of October /
Early Nov for Dec / Jan harvest.
Lambs
lettuce: mild flavoured leaf – a good contrast to some of the stronger ones.
Sow late August / early September.
Winter
lettuces – some varieties are hardy enough to survive winter – arrowhead
lettuce is one good variety to try. Sow in August or early September.
Rocket –
good winter crop – and less prone to bolting than in the summer. Sow in late August or September.
Asian leaves
including: mustard red giant, green in the snow, and mizuna. Sow in late August
or early September).
Sorrel:
strong, lemony leaf, lovely in salads in small quantities. Sow in August for
winter leaves. This is another perennial that will produce leaves year round
once established).
Other winter
leaves:
Cavelo nero
– tall and stately, this can look great in containers, and the leaves are
actually more tender and tasty after a frost. The big leaves are best cooked, but smaller leaves can also be
used in salads.
Kale – home
grown kale can be tender and tasty, well worth experimenting with – I’m
currently trying a heritage variety called asparagus kale.
Bright
lights chard – a bright and cheerful winter crop – and one that often recovers
to grow very well in the early spring.
Spinach – is
less prone to bolting if grown at this time of year. Sow in August.
Coriander –
coriander does surprisingly well in cold weather, I’ve had my best crops from
early September sowings. It doesn’t bolt at this time of year – and although it
goes nearly dormant in the coldest months,it usually comes back strong in the
early spring.
Source: Vertical Veg at: http://www.verticalveg.org.uk/winter-growing-its-time-to-plan-and-sow/
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