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Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog

The wonder of plants and fungi.

Jeremy Bartlett's Let It Grow Blog
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"People from a planet without flowers would think we must be mad with joy the whole time to have such things about us." - Iris Murdoch

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Sweet Cicely, Myrrhis odorata

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 14 January, 2012 by Jeremy Bartlett17 January, 2016
Sweet Cicely

Sweet Cicely

Sometimes there are plants we like so much that we try to grow them wherever we go. For the Romans in Britain, it was Alexanders (Smyrnium olusatrum) and, less fortunately Ground Elder (Aegopogon podagraria). For me, it is Sweet Cicely, Myrrhis odorata.

Where I grew up in North East Scotland, Sweet Cicely takes the place of Cow Parsley (Anthriscus sylvestris) along roadsides, providing a mass of frothy white flowers in spring. I grow Sweet Cicely because it reminds me of this part of the world, but also because it is pretty, versatile, edible and its leaves stay green for most of the year.

Like Alexanders and Ground Elder, Sweet Cicely is probably an introduction to Britain and it is often found near houses and old settlements (view UK distribution map). In Norfolk I have only seen it in gardens. We grow it in our back garden (pictured above), on the edge of our allotment and in the Grapes Hill Community Garden in Norwich. It does well in semi-shade in our garden and in full sun on sandy loam on the allotment.

Sweet Cicely is a member of the Parsley Family, Apiaceae (formerly Umbelliferae) and is a hardy perennial that grows to 60 – 90cm tall. The small white flowers, borne in umbels, are followed by long, ridged seeds that start off green and ripen to a dark brown-black.

The leaves have a gentle, pleasant aniseed scent and can be used in salads and omelettes. In her excellent “Jekka’s Complete Herb Book” (Kyle Cathie 2007) Jekka McVicar suggests adding them to soups, stews and to the water cabbage is cooked in. Leaves can be added to sweet recipes as a natural sweetener, to reduce the amount of sugar needed. I haven’t experimented yet, but adding a handful chopped leaves to stewed fruit is said to cut down the amount of sugar required by nearly half.

Sweet Cicely forms a long tap root rather like a parsnip, which can be cooked as a root vegetable or eaten raw, peeled and grated, as a salad with some French dressing. The taste is described as parsnip with a hint of aniseed. It is the long root that lets the plant thrive in well drained soil. It is also difficult to eradicate mature plants – should you wish to – as even small parts of the root will regrow.

Sweet Cicely

Young Sweet Cicely plants in Grapes Hill Community Garden

You can browse on the unripe, green seeds and add them to fruit salads. Herbalists also suggested they should be candied and used as a cure for plague, though I have my doubts about how effective this might have been. Ripe seeds can be added to apple crumbles and pies and are traditionally used to make a gentle furniture polish.

Sweet Cicely grows easily from seed but the seeds need a period of cold to germinate, so plant them outside in autumn, either sowing direct or in pots. In spring you can plant out the seedlings, though older plants resent having their roots disturbed and sulk when they have been transplanted. Sweet Cicely looks good either as individual plants or as a mass planting. After flowering you can cut back the flower heads and new foliage will grow and stay decorative until autumn. That way, you’ll also prevent the plants from self-seeding. I often cut some plants back and then collect seeds from the rest.

One proud discovery of mine is Sweet Cicely Vodka, adapted from John Wright’s recipe for Alexanders Vodka in his “Edible Seashore” book (River Cottage Handbook No. 5, Bloomsbury 2009), although I’ve since found similar recipes on the internet. I liquidised 500g of Sweet Cicely chopped stems into a puree, which I filtered through a jelly bag, squeezing to extract the juice. I put the juice in a measuring jug and added about a half of its volume in sugar, then topped it up with about three times the volume of vodka. I poured the resulting mixture into a sterilised bottle and sealed it. Sweet Cicely Vodka can be stored or drunk immediately. I quite like it neat but you could serve it with ice or even martini. It has a much more subtle taste (and colour) than Alexanders Vodka.

Cheers!

Posted in Edible, Foraging, Ornamental | Tagged Grapes Hill Community Garden, Myrrhis odorata, Norwich, salads, Sweet Cicely, Sweet Cicely Vodka

Achocha, Cyclanthera pedata

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 13 January, 2012 by Jeremy Bartlett8 June, 2019
Achocha

Achocha growing in the Grapes Hill Community Garden

Last year I grew Achocha, Cyclantheraa pedata, for the first time, on my allotment and in the Grapes Hill Community Garden in Norwich. The seeds came from Garden Organic’s Heritage Seed Library.

This striking plant is a member of the cucumber family (Cucurbitaceae). Also known as Caigua (pronounced kai-wa), Slipper Gourd and Stuffing Cucumber, it comes from Peru. It is also grown in other South American countries, India, Bhutan and Nepal.

Achocha climbs up to 4 or 5 metres in a season by means of branched tendrils and has small, greenish-yellow flowers. (Its growth habit and appearance remind me a bit of White Bryony, Bryonia diocia.)

Its fruits are pale green mini gourds, about 6-15cm long, with a hollow, spongy interior containing up to a dozen seeds. Mature seeds are hard, uneven in shape and dark brown. They look more like small bark chips than cucumber seeds. As Achocha is self-fertile and doesn’t cross-pollinate with any cucumbers or squashes, it is easy to save the seed – which is what I’ve done.

Young Achocha fruit are pleasant to eat raw: they are crunchy and taste like a cross between cucumber and pea pods.

They can also be stir-fried. When older, they become fibrous and need to be cooked: made into curries, stuffed and baked or used to make pickles or chutney.

See http://bcukrecipes.blog.co.uk/2009/11/04/cooking-with-achocha-7306012/ for a curry recipe and http://www.appalachianfeet.com/2010/12/13/how-to-grow-and-use-achochacaigua-a-problem-free-cucumber-substitute-wrecipes/ for another recipe and photos.

Achocha is reckoned to be good for you and, according to Wikipedia, studies show it may reduce cholesterol levels.

Achocha is more tolerant of low temperatures than courgettes and squashes and survived in our mild 2011 autumn for several weeks after the courgette plants had died. To grow, sow seeds on a light windowsill indoors in mid to late April and then move the young plants to their permanent outdoor home in late May or early June. Give plants a trellis or frame to climb up, otherwise they’ll sprawl along the ground. Support seedlings with a stick, so their tendrils have something to grip, and keep them more than a tendril’s length of other plants or you’ll end up with a kind of green spaghetti that is impossible to untangle.

Posted in Edible | Tagged Achocha, Caigua, Cyclanthera pedata, Grapes Hill Community Garden, Norwich, Stuffing Cucumber

Garlic Chives, Allium tuberosum

Jeremy Bartlett's LET IT GROW blog Posted on 11 January, 2012 by Jeremy Bartlett17 January, 2016
Garlic Chives

Garlic Chives

Garlic Chives, Allium tuberosum, are one of my favourite plants. They tick several boxes: edible, attractive, easy to grow and a good bee plant.

You can buy seeds of this relative of chives, garlic, onions and leeks, plant them outside in the spring and have a row of plants by the end of the summer. This is what I did several years ago.

Once you have your Garlic Chives, you’re unlikely to need to sow their seeds again, as the plants are perennial and gradually increase in tidy clumps, which can be divided every few years to provide more stock. On the sandy soil of my allotment the plants also self sow themselves. The black seeds are relatively heavy and so new plants appear within a metre of the parent. The first sign of self seeding can be when you realise that the young shoots you thought were grass have a distinct scent of garlic.

Garlic Chives die back in winter and then start to shoot in spring. The leaves are strap-shaped, different in profile to the rounded, hollow leaves of normal Chives (Allium schoenoprasum). White star-shaped flowers are borne on stalks above the leaves in August and attract bees and sometimes butterflies.

You can use the leaves of Garlic Chives as a flavouring in the same way as ordinary Chives, but be aware that the flavour is more garlic than mild onion. The flowers are also edible and can be added to salads or nibbled straight from the plant. The taste is a mixture of sweetness and garlic, the garlic element lingering longer in the mouth.

Garlic Chives are a popular ingredient in Chinese, Korean and Vietnamese cookery and are used in stir-fries, pancakes and soups. They are also known as Chinese Chives.

Posted in Edible, Ornamental | Tagged Allium, Allium tuberosum, Chinese Chives, Garlic Chives, salads

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Thirty latest posts

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