Sentences with phrase «grow some lettuce for»

Christen Middle School's community garden helped grow lettuce for the salad bar in 2015, cutting food costs and allowing students to connect with where their meals came from.
I'd love to grow some lettuce for salad, and top it with tomatoes and veggies I grew myself.

Not exact matches

Because people may find it difficult to establish for sure that their lettuce does not come from the growing region that's suspected to be the source.
Plus, the system promises to produce lettuce and herbs even in the dead of winter, meaning you don't need to live in an ideal environment for growing vegetables.
The countertop kit promises to be a foolproof method for growing lettuce and herbs year - round.
The wild B.C. spot prawns are «steeped» in bouillon for three minutes Bibb lettuce grown hydroponically by Vancouver's Urban Barns
At least another 31 cases are believed to be tied to romaine lettuce grown in Yuma, Arizona, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control said.
For grown - ups, serve in a pita pocket with lettuce and tomatoes.
Summer is too hot for lettuce to grow but perfect for cucumbers, tomatoes, and peppers.
I grew up in the 50's and 60's and about the only fresh green thing we had in the winter was iceberg lettuce (well, except for brussel sprouts and cabbage; we won't go there because my mother was in the «cook it until it disintegrates» school of culinary practice).
Amaranth (Chinese Spinach) Artichokes Asparagus Asparagus Pea Beans Beets Bitter Melons and Wax Gourds Broccoli Brussels Sprouts Burdock (Gobo) Cabbage Carrots Cauliflower Chinese (Napa) Cabbage Citron Melon (For candied citron, pies, etc.) Cantaloupes and Melons Cardoon Celery Chervil Chicory Chives Collards Corn and Ornamental Corn Cover Crops Cowpeas Cucumbers Eggplant Endive Fava Beans Finocchio Garland Chrysanthemum Gourds and Decorative Squash Jicama (Mexican Yam) Kale Kohlrabi Leeks Lettuce and Mesclun Loofah (Luffa) Sponges Malabar Spinach Mache (Corn Salad) Micro Greens (Baby Greens) Minutina (Buckshorn Plaintain) Mustard and Other Greens Oats (Hulless Oats for cereal) Okra Onions / Scallions Orach (Mountain Spinach) Ornamental Corn and Grain Pak Choi / Bak Choi Parsley Peas: Early Spring Peanuts Peppers Super Hot Peppers Popcorn Pumpkins Quinoa (Cereal, Superfood) Radicchio Radish Ramps (Wild Leeks) Rhubarb Rice (Can be grown in garden soil) Rutabaga Salsify (Oyster Plant) Saltwort Scorzonea Shallots (From Seed) Sorghum Soybeans Spinach Squash Summer Type and Zucchini Squash Winter Type Squash Japanese Kabocha Type Squash (Fall and Winter Decorations) Strawberry Sugar Beets Swiss Chard Tomatoes Turnip WatermeFor candied citron, pies, etc.) Cantaloupes and Melons Cardoon Celery Chervil Chicory Chives Collards Corn and Ornamental Corn Cover Crops Cowpeas Cucumbers Eggplant Endive Fava Beans Finocchio Garland Chrysanthemum Gourds and Decorative Squash Jicama (Mexican Yam) Kale Kohlrabi Leeks Lettuce and Mesclun Loofah (Luffa) Sponges Malabar Spinach Mache (Corn Salad) Micro Greens (Baby Greens) Minutina (Buckshorn Plaintain) Mustard and Other Greens Oats (Hulless Oats for cereal) Okra Onions / Scallions Orach (Mountain Spinach) Ornamental Corn and Grain Pak Choi / Bak Choi Parsley Peas: Early Spring Peanuts Peppers Super Hot Peppers Popcorn Pumpkins Quinoa (Cereal, Superfood) Radicchio Radish Ramps (Wild Leeks) Rhubarb Rice (Can be grown in garden soil) Rutabaga Salsify (Oyster Plant) Saltwort Scorzonea Shallots (From Seed) Sorghum Soybeans Spinach Squash Summer Type and Zucchini Squash Winter Type Squash Japanese Kabocha Type Squash (Fall and Winter Decorations) Strawberry Sugar Beets Swiss Chard Tomatoes Turnip Watermefor cereal) Okra Onions / Scallions Orach (Mountain Spinach) Ornamental Corn and Grain Pak Choi / Bak Choi Parsley Peas: Early Spring Peanuts Peppers Super Hot Peppers Popcorn Pumpkins Quinoa (Cereal, Superfood) Radicchio Radish Ramps (Wild Leeks) Rhubarb Rice (Can be grown in garden soil) Rutabaga Salsify (Oyster Plant) Saltwort Scorzonea Shallots (From Seed) Sorghum Soybeans Spinach Squash Summer Type and Zucchini Squash Winter Type Squash Japanese Kabocha Type Squash (Fall and Winter Decorations) Strawberry Sugar Beets Swiss Chard Tomatoes Turnip Watermelon
Related on Organic Authority Meatless Monday Roundup: 4 Spinach Recipes For the Love of Lettuce: Eating Leafy Greens Keeps Your Mind Sharp 5 Cold - Happy Foods to Grow This Fall
First of all, because lettuce growing has shifted back to California for the season.
For example, Salanova lettuce, when grown by the Hishtil method, retains its freshness even in the summer.
This vast and growing menu segment includes compostable, takeaway bowls filled with seasonal vegetables, lettuces, ancient grains, eggs and avocado to big ceramic bowls for eating Korean - style bibimbap, brothy soups and extra-large salads in house.
«New varieties, new growing technology and new packaging are all part of our commitment to being the most innovative company in the produce industry, and all grown pesticide - free,» said David Karwacki, chief executive officer of The Star Group of Cos. «The Inspired Greens project was a major commitment to a new approach for greenhouse lettuce that has never been done in North America.
I grow zucchini, cucumbers (bush plants), many many tomatoes, lettuce, rutabagas, peas, lots of potatoes (two seasons worth), asparagus (this takes years to get going), peppers, carrots, and pole beans (a must have for anyone with a crunch for space).
I always have a solid patch of kale somewhere out there, I love growing lots of beautiful lettuce for fresh summer meals, and despite the lack of space, I give a large chunk of it to winter squash because it stores easily and we rely on it to get us through the long winter!
Rabbit Food Lettuce Wraps for Kids to Make from Rainy Day Mum Bunny Color Sorting from Toddler Approved The Tale of Peter Rabbit ABC Carrot Patch from Growing Book by Book Name Tracing Bunny Fun from The Educators» Spin On It Carrot Number Matching Activity from 3 Dinosaurs Peter Rabbit Sensory Bin from Still Playing School Feed the Rabbit Activity from Mom Inspired Life Peter Rabbit Paper Plate Pop - Up Garden from I Can Teach My Child Bunny Treat Bags from Mama Miss Carrot Painting Pre-Writing Practice from Preschool Powol Packets Bunny Cracker Snack from The Pleasantest Thing
Spring months provide opportunities for tasting different local lettuces and herbs, some of which are grown in the school garden.
My eyes grew to the size of watermelons but I put lettuce on a fork and hoped for the best.
Now this way of thinking goes against all the usual resolutions people make because it's not about loosing weight and getting «beach body ready» for June, because you eat what it available to you that is locally grown, and I know a lot more cows and potatoes that are available for eating this time of year than heads of lettuce.
For novice gardeners, seed company W. Atlee Burpee & Co. has created a «Money Garden» seed pack that costs $ 10 and can produce $ 650 worth of easy - to - grow carrots, tomatoes, lettuce, beans, peas and peppers.
During the long dry season farmers here depend on irrigation to water their vegetable crops, growing lettuce and tomatoes, green beans and onions, mangos and melons for urban markets all over the country and for export to Europe.
For example, «lettuce or tomatoes may be contaminated, but once they enter a household, you can make sure that you do nt allow the bacteria to grow and multiply,» he says.
My two boys and my dad worked together to create this planter box, and it is now home for kale, lettuce and herbs growing on our patio.
I have some Kale growing in my Lettuce Tub, this looks like a great recipe for me to try!
There is no salad in the world as wonderful as the one you grow yourself, especially for students who have never tasted a homegrown tomato or pulled lettuce and other salad fixings from the rich earth.
The videos for students illustrate the real life context for the experiments that they are working on, for example a visit to the Thorntons factory in Derby links to the experiment investigating the melting point of chocolate and a look inside an urban hydroponics farm that grows lettuces reveals that plants don't always need to grow in soil.
«I wanted the lettuce and eggs at room temperature... the butter - and - sugar sandwiches we ate after school for snack... the marrow bones my mother made us eat as kids that I grew to crave as an adult... There would be no «conceptual» or «intellectual» food, just the salty, sweet, starchy, brothy, crispy things that one craves when one is actually hungry.
In addition there were areas with rich black soil good for growing celery, lettuce, cabbage, and carrots.
The USDA / NASS studies tracked harvested acres without differentiating between irrigated and non-irrigated acreage; it gathered data on planted vs. harvested acres for some crops but not others; it did not account for systems in which «baby vegetable» crops (usually organic) are grown in short rotations on the same plot (such as spinach, lettuce, and carrots) and thus have lower yields; and it omitted some data that would have revealed too much information about individual farmers, in cases where very few growers produce a particular crop.
Are foods like lettuce, eggs and beef better for you if they're grown locally in your area, than if they're shipped in from far away?
Using an aeroponic Tower Garden growing system, the garden is growing lettuce, greens and herbs for airport restaurants with an almost zero transportation footprint.
A re-circulating aquaponic garden grows all the edible ingredients for fish tacos including peppers, tomatoes, onions, corn, and lettuce, with zero waste, no soil and no fertilizer in nine bins filled with gravel.
My grandmother, who grew up in Ontario in the 1930s, confirmed that she, too, ate vast quantities of cabbage all winter long and couldn't wait for fresh lettuce to appear in the summertime.
With California producing nearly half of the fruit and vegetables grown in the United States, attention has naturally focused on the water required to grow popular foods such as walnuts, broccoli, lettuce, tomatoes, strawberries, almonds and grapes... But for those truly interested in lowering their water footprint, those numbers pale next to the water required to fatten livestock...
3) Lettuce Lettuce will get you the biggest bang for your buck plus it's super simple to grow.
Now I know how to do it right... for years It has been a pain to harvet the lettuce I have grown... thanks for the tips.
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