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Veggie Gardening

National Zucchini Bread Day

April 20, 2017 by Heather Leister

Welcome Zucchini Lovers. Celebrate with us!

national zucchini bread day is April 25 - zucchini bread recipe

You are just in time for National Zucchini Bread Day!  If you included zucchini in last summer’s garden then there’s a good chance that your freezer is well stocked with leftovers from last year’s harvest. This easy to grow squash is notorious for producing more crop than gardeners know what to do with. If you still have a ziplock bag, or two, of frozen zucchini hanging around then you’re in luck! Now is the perfect time to defrost your zucchini leftovers because April 25th is National Zucchini Bread Day.

sliced zucchini bread for national food holiday

Photo Credit: Flickr Commons

Who doesn’t love an excuse to celebrate a national food day? With zucchini bread you have a way to satisfy your craving for warm carbohydrates while also getting in a serving of vegetables. Not to mention fiber! It’s always a plus when your fiber comes in the form of delicious bread. As an added bonus you’ll be able to either use up freezer leftovers or have an excellent excuse for finally starting your garden.

zucchini for national zucchini bread day

Photo Credit: Wikimedia

If you don’t already have zucchini in your freezer, don’t panic. Pick up the produce at your local store and use fresh zucchini in your bread recipe. Then head to the garden center for seeds and celebrate National Zucchini Bread Day by planting something that you will enjoy both in a few months time and at next year’s celebration!

several varieties of zucchini seed packets

Quality seeds for a successful crop! Choose varieties that will thrive in your area.

Mid May happens to be an excellent time to plant zucchini seeds because the ground has begun to warm up. You can also begin your seeds indoors, but if you want to direct-seed and avoid transplanting then it’s best to wait until the soil temperature measures around 60-degrees. Check with your local independent garden center to know when it is ideal for planting your seeds. In Utah along the Wasatch Front, gardeners remember Mother’s Day as the time when the rest of the garden can be planted.  Cold crops can be planted as early as March.  Zucchini is definitely not a cold crop.  

grate and freeze fresh zucchini for national zucchini bread day in april

Photo Credit: Flickr

In the fall, if your plants have done well, you will most likely find yourself giving away zucchini. To friends, neighbors, coworkers, maybe even strangers. Even after all that generosity you should still have plenty of zucchini left to freeze for the following year. Preserving the squash is easily done. Wash the zucchini in cold water, pat it dry, then cut off both ends. Use a cheese grater to grate the plant and then store the grated zucchini in a well-labeled ziplock bag in the freezer. The vegetable should keep in the freezer for approximately eight months. Which means you’ll be prepared and ready to bake when National Zucchini Bread Day comes around again!

Click next for a simple delicious Banana Zucchini Chocolate Chip bread recipe.  It will please everyone!

Western Gardens | Utah

Filed Under: Eat from Garden - Recipes, Vegetables, Veggie Gardening Tagged With: Food Days, National food holidays, National Zucchini Bread Day, Squash, zucchini, zucchini bread, zucchini recipes

5 Tips to Get Kids Gardening

June 10, 2016 by Jenn Crookston

5 Tips to Get Kids Gardening | Life Tips | Parenting Tips | Garden

Do you love planning out your garden?  Do you eagerly anticipate all the delicious food you’ll be enjoying after all the hard work of caring for a garden?  This is one of the highlights of Spring at our house!

But there always seems to be one downfall.

Life gets crazy and everyone gets busy, and no one wants to help.  It turns into a bit of a Henny Penny situation…everyone wants to enjoy the delicious garden produce as long as I do all the work!  And I bet it’s not just our family.

Over the years, I’ve come up with 5 tips to get kids gardening.  These are easy tips for busy families, and they’ll help your garden look its best all summer long!

These 5 tips should help cover a variety of children’s personalities as well as their daily mood, and it’s nice to have a surprise in your back pocket if yesterday’s plan doesn’t work today!

5 Tips to get Kids Gardening

1. Get them their own tools

Everything is more fun if you’ve got your own supplies (bonus points if they’re cute and they match!).  It’s also easier for kids to work with tools that fit them, and when it’s easier they’re a lot more likely to want to help!
5 Tips to Get Kids Gardening | Life Tips | Parenting Tips | Garden
(photo source)

2. Let Them Choose What You Grow

If they’re excited about the food you’re going to grow, chances are they’ll be excited about working in the garden to keep their plants healthy and growing strong.  You can even give them a section of the garden to be in charge of.  If they do all their own weeding and watering and harvesting, they’ll have a great sense of accomplishment!

3. Involve Friends

I know this might sound strange.  What kid wants to go somewhere else and do chores? I’ve found that when kids are working with their friends, they don’t seem to mind the work.  It can be fun if they’re working together, and popsicles are the perfect payment on a hot summer day!

4. Let Them Earn Money

If your child is driven by money, offer to let them have a produce stand with the extra veggies!  We always seem to have a plethora of certain veggies (zucchini comes to mind!).  Your produce stand can be as easy as some baskets set out on the curb, a folding table, or something as cute as this⬇︎
5 Tips to Get Kids Gardening | Life Tips | Parenting Tips | Garden
(photo source)

5. Work With Them

I don’t know about you, but it doesn’t matter if it’s a job inside the house or out in the yard, our children work harder and more happily when we’re working with them.  I like to set aside about 30 minutes several mornings each week to work with my kids, weeding and cleaning up the garden area.  This allows the kids to ask questions and get guidance and when we’re all working together, the work gets done quickly.
5 Tips to Get Kids Gardening | Life Tips | Parenting Tips | GardenWhat tips do you have for getting kids to help you in the garden?  Let me know in a comment below!

Filed Under: Gardening, Tips & How To's, Vegetables, Veggie Gardening

Cool Season Vegetables vs. Warm Season Vegetables

May 19, 2016 by Vanessa Myers

Welcome, I’m so glad you’re here!

Do you know when to plant your veggies? (Hint: cool and warm season veggies aren't planted at the same time!) These handy lists will tell you what's what and when to plant!

Are you itching for beautiful weather so you can get your veggies planted?  You are not alone!  Fresh vegetables are the highlight of most gardens, with fresh, healthy and delicious produce.  Just make sure to plant the right veggies at the right time to get the best results!

Vegetable garden season is upon us and many gardeners are happily planning out their shopping trips to the nursery. It’s tempting to put out every kind of vegetable that you want to grow, all at the same time.

However, it’s important to know whether the types you are planting are cool season vegetables or warm season vegetables so that you can plant them at the appropriate times and help ensure the best crop possible.

Click NEXT to see the Cool Season Veggies and when to plant them!

Western Garden Centers | Salt Lake City | Sandy | West Valley UTAH

Image by *Jay~bay* under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives License

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Filed Under: Tips & How To's, Utah Gardening, Vegetables, Veggie Gardening Tagged With: cool season vegetables, food, Gardening, How To, tips, Utah, vegetarian, veggies, warm season vegetables, Western Garden Centers, Western Gardens

10 Veggies to Plant Now to Save Money Later

May 18, 2016 by Jenn Crookston

Hello! So glad to you’re here!  header

Do you love fresh, delicious produce, but you also love saving money?  Then you’re in the right place!  I’m sharing ten of my favorite veggies that not only taste better grown at home, but’ll keep more green in your wallet, too!

I am blessed with a household of children who love to eat veggies.  When I hear parents planning/plotting ways to get more veggies into their children’s diet I say a silent prayer of gratitude that isn’t a battle I have to fight!

But because we love our veggies so much, we tend to fly through them, especially during the summer months, when it’s hot and a heavy meal is too much.  This year, instead of running to the grocery store every other day, we can just run out to the garden!

Let me start by saying, if your family hates tomatoes, growing them yourself probably won’t make your kids suddenly love them (even though they definitely taste better than store-bought!).

So before you start planting, think of things your family enjoys and build around that.  Eat a ton of spinach?  Plant a ton!  Love kale, but hate spending $5 every week for a bag of organic baby leaves?  Put that on your garden list.  Save money by planting what you’ll actually eat and cross them off your grocery list!

There are a ton of great veggies that grow well here in Utah.  My list saves me money every year and they taste amazing fresh from the garden (and yes, I know a tomato isn’t botanically a vegetable, but in our house it falls into that category!).

Click NEXT to see what 10 garden veggies are saving me money!

Western Garden Centers | Salt Lake City | Sandy | West Valley UTAH

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Filed Under: Gardening, Tomatoes, Utah Gardening, Vegetables, Veggie Gardening Tagged With: food, Gardening, How To, tips, veggies, Western Garden Centers, Western Gardens

9 Plants you need for your Salsa Garden

May 14, 2016 by Kirsten

Welcome, I’m so glad you’re here!

Love Salsa? Plant a salsa garden and make it fresh! 9 Veggies you need in your Salsa Garden! www.westerngardens.com

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Do you love fresh pico de gallo, chili verde salsa or red salsa with tortilla chips?  Then a Salsa Garden is perfect for you! We love enjoying any of these with our favorite Mexican dishes, and what’s better than being able to make it from fresh veggies from your own garden?!  The taste of homegrown tomatoes vs. store-bought is huge…homegrown tomatoes are so much more delicious and flavorful—and it’s exciting to be able to say “I grew that!”

DSC_0226

If you have never grown a garden in your yard, I suggest getting your soil tested. The cost is about $10 and can be done at USU in Logan, Utah. You can just mail in a sample and they can tell you the P and K levels, pH, salt, and lime content, which can help you find out what your soil might need before you spend money on your plants and take the time to plant and water them. Knowing these levels can help you avoid things like bottom rot and make sure you get the most out of your plants.

Avoid planting your veggies until the overnight temps are at least 50° or above. This is typically around May 15th in Utah.  Watch your local forecast…our Utah weather is famous for being temperamental!

Ready to get started with the 9 veggies?  Click NEXT to see what to plant!

Western Garden Centers | Salt Lake City | Sandy | West Valley UTAH

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Filed Under: Gardening, Tomatoes, Utah Gardening, Vegetables, Veggie Gardening Tagged With: Salsa, salsa garden, tomatillos, tomatoes, vegetables

10 Tomato Varieties You Should Grow

May 4, 2016 by Vanessa Myers

 Welcome!  I’m so happy you’re here!

10 tomato varieties you should grow this year. Unique and delicious tomatoes that you can't beat!

Do you love home-grown tomatoes?  Then you’re in the right place!  There’s nothing quite as satisfying as a vine-ripened tomato fresh from the garden.  They offer bold flavors not usually found in grocery store varieties, which are often chosen for how well they ship and store on the shelf, instead of taste.

You will come across a wide selection of tomato varieties when you are shopping for seeds or starts. Before you rush out to pick out the first tomato plants you see, research what will do best in your yard and fit your culinary needs.

Tomato varieties come in a variety of shapes, sizes and colors

Image by aurélien under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

Considerations for Picking Tomato Varieties

General types of tomatoes include:

  • Beefsteak (big, great for slicing)
  • Cherry (small for salads and eating out of hand)
  • Plum (good for sauces and pastes)
  • Salad (medium, good for general use)

Tomatoes are also divided into whether they are determinate or indeterminate. If one is determinate, it will grow to a certain height and width and then stop. One crop will be produced before the plant dies. On the other hand, indeterminate plants will keep growing throughout the season. This is important to know if space is a consideration as indeterminate varieties can turn into a jungle if the conditions are favorable.

Finally, they will be labeled as either hybrid or heirloom. If a plant is hybrid, it is the result of crossing other varieties. They are not likely to retain their desired characteristics if you try to save the seeds for the next year, and they may even be sterile.  In contrast, you can collect seeds from heirlooms because they do generally keep the same genetics in their seeds.

Tomato Varieties to Check Out

The Black Krim tomato can have dark skin and flesh

Image by bert_m_b under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution License

1.Black Krim

  • Type: Beefsteak
  • Growth: Indeterminate
  • Genetics: Heirloom
  • Days to Harvest: 80

Interested in trying a tomato that isn’t red? Go for the Black Krim! This Russian variety sports fruit that bears a rich purple-red hue and is packed full of flavor.

Image by timlewisnm under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

Image by timlewisnm under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

2. Brandywine

  • Type: Beefsteak
  • Growth: Indeterminate
  • Genetics: Heirloom
  • Days to Harvest: 78

This is the most common type of heirloom that you will see available for sale, and has been planted since the 1800s. Each pinkish-red tomato can weigh over a pound!

Early Girl tomatoes are indeed one of the first varieties to mature

Image by Prestonbot under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution License

3. Early Girl

  • Type: Salad
  • Growth: Indeterminate
  • Genetics: Hybrid
  • Days to Harvest: 54-59

This variety is very popular due to its early harvest date. Early Girl will work well as a general purpose tomato for all of your favorite recipes.

Great White tomatoes will live up to the name and be white in hue

Image by quinn.anya under a Flickr Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License

4. Great White

  • Type: Beefsteak
  • Growth: Indeterminate
  • Genetics: Heirloom
  • Days to Harvest: 85

In addition to red, orange, pink, purple, green and yellow, tomatoes can also be white when ripe. This variety is notable for being especially sweet, making it a delight to eat fresh!

Click NEXT for 6 more delicious varieties!

Western Garden Centers | Salt Lake City | Sandy | West Valley UTAH

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Filed Under: Veggie Gardening Tagged With: Gardening, tomato varieties, tomatoes, veggies, Western Gardens

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