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#1
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Brussels sprouts
Good morning,
almost paralyzed by the daily news and the perspective of having nowhere else to go, I continue observing my garden and will even continue constructing my greenhouse. Being less in the mood for « action » as appears to be the rest of the world, I spend much time just perceiving the changes... The mustard has almost completely rotten, the field salad eventually looks like it could be edible and the radish does me the favor to decay where it stands. So I won't have to clean it away in spring. But the Brussels sprouts are a little mystery to me. They appear to have withstood frost and snow, icy winds and continue-, rather re-commence to produce .., well they produce whatever you call the sprouts in English. I have not yet had the courage to harvest ... them.., but want to ask you two questions; perhaps you have more experience: 1. Will those late ... sprouts (we call them „Röschen” in German, meaning “small roses”) be good for cooking or do they more probably taste bitter ? 2. Would you keep the grains of those plants which survived the winter for the next season? I bought them from Kokopelli, meaning that they are *not* hybridized. Thank you. « Je suis Rémie Fraisse » Michael - I have never been, am not and will never be Charlie - Uplawski. -- Location: Lower Normandy (Orne), France GnuPG/OpenPGP 4096R/3216CF02 2013-11-15 [expires: 2015-11-15] sub 4096R/2751C550 2013-11-15 [expires: 2015-11-15] [Next key will use elliptic-curve algorithm! :-) Get GnuPG!!] |
#2
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Brussels sprouts
.... and you should not suspect anything else behind those “Brssels
sprouts”... even if the metaphor won't stop to nag me now. Just ignore any intelligent allegations that I might have subconsciously planted here and there... I would really not know how to do that, if I wanted. Darn. On Mon, 2 Feb 2015 08:12:47 +0100, Michael Uplawski wrote: Good morning, almost paralyzed by the daily news and the perspective of having nowhere else to go, I continue observing my garden and will even continue constructing my greenhouse. Being less in the mood for « action » as appears to be the rest of the world, I spend much time just perceiving the changes... The mustard has almost completely rotten, the field salad eventually looks like it could be edible and the radish does me the favor to decay where it stands. So I won't have to clean it away in spring. But the Brussels sprouts are a little mystery to me. They appear to have withstood frost and snow, icy winds and continue-, rather re-commence to produce .., well they produce whatever you call the sprouts in English. I have not yet had the courage to harvest ... them.., but want to ask you two questions; perhaps you have more experience: 1. Will those late ... sprouts (we call them „Röschen” in German, meaning “small roses”) be good for cooking or do they more probably taste bitter ? 2. Would you keep the grains of those plants which survived the winter for the next season? I bought them from Kokopelli, meaning that they are *not* hybridized. Thank you. « Je suis Rémie Fraisse » Michael - I have never been, am not and will never be Charlie - Uplawski. -- Location: Lower Normandy (Orne), France GnuPG/OpenPGP 4096R/3216CF02 2013-11-15 [expires: 2015-11-15] sub 4096R/2751C550 2013-11-15 [expires: 2015-11-15] [Next key will use elliptic-curve algorithm! :-) Get GnuPG!!] |
#3
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Brussels sprouts
"Michael Uplawski" wrote
almost paralyzed by the daily news and the perspective of having nowhere else to go, I continue observing my garden and will even continue constructing my greenhouse. Being less in the mood for « action » as appears to be the rest of the world, I spend much time just perceiving the changes... The mustard has almost completely rotten, the field salad eventually looks like it could be edible and the radish does me the favor to decay where it stands. So I won't have to clean it away in spring. But the Brussels sprouts are a little mystery to me. They appear to have withstood frost and snow, icy winds and continue-, rather re-commence to produce .., well they produce whatever you call the sprouts in English. I have not yet had the courage to harvest ... them.., but want to ask you two questions; perhaps you have more experience: 1. Will those late ... sprouts (we call them „Röschen” in German, meaning “small roses”) be good for cooking or do they more probably taste bitter ? 2. Would you keep the grains of those plants which survived the winter for the next season? I bought them from Kokopelli, meaning that they are *not* hybridized. 1. It is normally said that Sprouts taste sweeter after being frosted so quite the opposite to what you may think. However they should be tight little round buttons not open like a baby cabbage. Don't forget you can also cook the tops of the plants like cabbage, lots of people find that the best part of the plant. 2. If they are indeed open pollinated plants then you could get seed from them if you let them flower, but if they are F1 then you will get a right mixture of types. -- Regards. Bob Hobden. Posted to this Newsgroup from the W of London, UK |
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