Trying New Things In My Winter Garden: ‘White Icicle’ Radishes & Swiss Chard
Do you like to try new things?
I do – especially in the garden. I’m always on the lookout for new vegetables to try out, including some heirloom varieties, which aren’t technically new.
One year, I tried growing ‘container corn’. You can read here how it did.
This year, I tried growing ‘White Icicle’ radishes, which are a cross between radishes and turnips. My mother had given me the seeds and I’ve always had a very easy time growing regular radishes, so I thought I’d try these.
They grew easily and the leaves reached over 2 1/2 ft. long!
It was exciting to pull them out and I couldn’t wait to try them.
While they were very easy to grow, I must confess that I didn’t like them.
I really wanted to and their flavor was a lot like a turnip, but they burned my mouth – much more than the radishes do.
My grand experiment last year was growing Swiss chard and afterward, I wish that I had been growing it all along. It’s not only easy to grow, it also tastes great in salads!
I grow it both in my vegetable gardens and in pots.
So, while I wish that I liked ‘White Icicle’ I don’t. But, it wasn’t a waste of time growing them. You see, gardening is a grand experiment and it’s always fun to try growing new things and while there are going be some failures – there are also great successes (like my Swiss chard) when you discover what grows well that you like.
*This week, I’m sharing what I’ve harvested from my winter vegetable garden and sharing lessons learned. Yesterday, it was broccoli and how to freeze it.
Noelle Johnson, aka, 'AZ Plant Lady' is a author, horticulturist, and landscape consultant who helps people learn how to create, grow, and maintain beautiful desert gardens that thrive in a hot, dry climate. She does this through her consulting services, her online class Desert Gardening 101, and her monthly membership club, Through the Garden Gate. As she likes to tell desert-dwellers, "Gardening in the desert isn't hard, but it is different."
The think I learned about growing broccoli is that it’s so important to hold it under water for a really long time after you pick it. After you think you’ve held it under for what you think is long enough, hold it a little longer. That’s when the tiny broccoli-stem colored worms float to the surface! Aaaaahhh!!!
Oops, I had better rinse better next time. 😉