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Agrochemicals & Pesticides | Vegetables | Fruit | Plant Seeds

Are your plants ready to be picked?

http://www.nwitimes.com/articles/2008/08/11/featur [2008-8-12]

Tag : Potatoes Carrots Onions Cabbage
Are your plants ready to be picked? Story Discussion Font Size: Default font size Larger font size
By DEAN FOSDICK
For The Associated Press | Monday, August 11, 2008 | No comments posted.
Few things will ruin a season's worth of expectations faster thandining on fresh-picked fruits or vegetables whose time hasn't come.Or, for that matter, whose time has come and gone.

Guess wrong about when to shift produce from plot to plate andyou've wasted weeks of effort. That's what home gardening is allabout, isn't it: trying to capture that unmatched moment of peakflavor? Growing better quality food at less cost?

Determining when that moment has arrived, however, is not simple.

"The only sure way to tell if something is ready for harvest is tosample it," said Cynthia Haynes, an extension horticulturist withIowa State University.

"Size and color usually are good indicators, but even veterangardeners can be fooled," Haynes said. "Colors will change first,although that doesn't mean they're ripe. Fruits and vegetables haveto reach full size before flavors can develop. Eat a few first tobe certain."

Pick too early and flavor will be lacking. Wait too long and you'llhave starchy, bitter-tasting produce.

"It often will be moldy and insect damaged, too," said LaurenDevine, a spokeswoman for Jarden Home Brands in Daleville, Ind.,which manufactures the classic Ball home-canning Mason jars."Definitely not top quality. You'd be smart to toss it."

Here are some guidelines for deciding when to harvest the mostpopular homegrown fruits and vegetables:

* Asparagus: Start when the spears are 6 or more inches long and asthick as your little finger. Snap them off at ground level and stopharvesting after several weeks so the plants have time to rechargefor next season.

* Beans (Lima): Pick when the pods are bright green and filled out.The beans are more tender if taken before they've fully matured.You'll know they're beyond prime when the pods begin to yellow.

* Beans (Snap): Best eaten when beans inside the pod are aboutone-quarter of full size. Pick frequently because they are quick toturn tough and starchy.

* Beets: Ready for eating when the roots reach an inch or more indiameter. Start your harvest with the tops, which make excellentgreens.

* Cabbage: Begin bringing them in if the heads feel solid whenpressure is gradually applied. The heads often split if allowed togrow overripe.

* Carrots: Depends on variety and size preference. Pull one fromthe ground to check its length and then give it a raw taste test.

* Cauliflower (and Broccoli): Harvest when the heads are full andsmooth and before the color starts to turn.

* Corn (Sweet): Wait until the silks are dry and the earscompletely filled out. "Shuck an ear and use a fingernail to piercea kernel," said Haynes. "You want to see a milky juice coming out.That tells you it's ready for harvest."

* Cucumbers (and Zucchini): Inspect daily and pick early and often."Zucchini can be troublesome," Haynes said. "... If it gets toobig, it can get too soft. But the more you harvest, the more theplants fruit for you."

* Eggplant: Cut the fruit from the plant when it has grown firm andshiny. An eggplant is beyond prime when its color dulls and theseeds turn brown.

* Lettuce (Head): Like cabbage, harvest when the heads become firmand full.

* Lettuce (Leaf): "Clip the outer leaves with a knife or scissorsjust above the ground," Haynes said. "It fills out again quicklyand you can make many return visits before the plant is done.You'll know when because the leaves will start tasting bitter."

* Melons: "Of all the crops one can grow, melons keep the bestsecrets about their own ripeness, but there are ways of crackingthe code," said Roger Doiron, founding director of KitchenGardeners International, a nonprofit network of organic cooks andgardeners based in Scarborough, Maine. "Muskmelons, for example,ripen on the vine but not off, so they don't get any sweeter afterpicking. Gardeners should be looking to harvest when theirmuskmelons `slip' from the vines when gentle pressure is applied tothe stem."

Watermelons, meanwhile, develop white-colored spots on theirundersides that become yellow as they ripen. A mature melon willgive off a dull, hollow thud when thumped with a knuckle.

"They should look heavy for their size, like oranges," said Devine."They'll be juicy when mature. You also should be able to tell bysmelling the melons. They give off a really fruity flavor (whenripe)."

* Onions (Dry): Harvest when the tops and necks have withered andcollapsed, and the bulbs won't dent when squeezed. Let dry for acouple of weeks.

* Peas: Pods should feel full but not plump or the peas will havehardened and become bitter. Peas are like strawberries; they cryout to be sampled.

* Potatoes: "In the case of `buried treasure,' like garlic andpotatoes, you need to look at their leaves for signs of readiness,"Doiron said. "Potatoes can be harvested when their foliage startsto turn yellow." Dig slowly and carefully to avoid slicing orbruising the tubers. Cure in a cool area for a week or more beforeeating.

* Tomatoes: Harvest when the fruit is fully red but still firm.Tomatoes will continue to mature after being picked butvine-ripened fruit tastes best. Refrigerating dulls the flavor;leave them at room temperature if they can't be eaten immediatelyafter being picked.

A popular harvesting rule of thumb is to pick small and pick often.Bigger is not always better when dealing with produce. Smalleritems frequently are more flavorful.

"Of all the home garden's advantages, proximity may be thebiggest," Doiron said. "When my garden is going full-tilt, I've gotthe equivalent of a fully stocked produce section ripening juststeps from my backdoor with something new in season every fewdays."



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