

Please note that this site is here for historical reasons
Which seed variety to buy - these have worked for me, an eclectic list.
Seed Sourcing
Companies like Tamar and Tucker offer a good range.
As I understand it many of their (and everyone else’s) seed have similar
origins in multinational seed houses. But the seed may be older or younger,
according to how much stock of old seed is carried by each operation. Unfortunately,
the buyer cannot know that!
One thing is for sure: fresh, home saved seed is far more vigorous and reliable.
See my archived September blog of monthly work. But it is difficult and skilful
work to save good seed, and time must be available at certain key moments. Real
Seeds offer good advice and some excellent seeds as well, although I don’t
agree with quite all their varietal assessments!
Do shop around and remember that seed is cheap in relation to what it can produce.
Index:
An asterisk (*) indicates vegetables that grow in half a season (in Britain), so they can
be grown before or after other half-season vegetables. For example, carrots
then oriental leaves or endives, lettuce then beetroot or bulb fennel, autumn
sown beans then leeks or kale.
Aubergine Best grown under cover. Only Oriental Express has produced well for
the last two summers - aubergines are marginal in British Atlantic conditions.
Beetroot* Boltardy has good flavour and grows well at any time of year, especially
from early sowing, as early as late February in plugs or pots in the greenhouse.
Burpees Golden tastes good and is a lovely colour, while Cheltenham Green Top
is long, sweet and stands well in winter.
Broad Bean* For sowing in autumn to overwinter, Aquadulce Claudia is reliable
and develops great flavour if beans are allowed to mature until white and creamy.
It also crops well from sowing by early March.
Brussels Sprouts Noisette (Organic Gardening Catalogue) is reliable, of good
flavour and appears less palatable to caterpillars than F1 hybrids.
Carrot* Early Nantes, for early and later sowings, grow vigorously to a fair
size, with fair sweetness. Berlicum and Autumn King varieties are good for sowing
by mid June, to store through winter. Coloured varieties have variable vigour
– yellow ones grow easily, purple ones are more tricky, all have intriguingly
different flavours.
Celeriac A large trial at Raymond Blanc’s garden revealed few differences
in flavour and growth. I have noticed this year that Prinz has healthier leaves
than Ibis, although both have grown to a fine size.
Chicories* Leaf chicory is rather bitter so I concentrate on bitter-sweet hearts,
mostly for salad. Fine red radicchio’s develop from most Palla Rossa varieties,
when sown late June to mid July. They are complemented by amazing pink and yellow
colours from varieties such as Lusia and Romea (Seeds of Italy).
Courgette I like Seeds of Italy’s selection, which emphasises that all
shapes, colours and sizes are possible! Genovese and Striato of Naples have
grown well here. I find that yellow varieties are less productive. Remember
that courgettes are simply under-grown marrows, of the summer squash family
– see winter squashes for Butternut et al. Pumpkins are different again,
see below.
Endive* For large leaved scaroles, try Bubikopf which keeps healthier than many
others (less browning at the margins). For a frizzy endive, I like Plantation
for its abundant green leaves and Bianca Riccia da Taglio (Real Seeds) for its
luminous and tasty leaves, of a bright yellow and highly decorative colour.
Exotics* Some I like include Tree Spinach (Simply Vegetables), which has beautiful
magenta shoots and grows up to five feet high, watercress for its (invasive)
vigour and flavour, and lime basil for stunning citrus aromas and tastes.
Fennel* Best not sown until June, nor after about mid July. Zefa Fino is worth
a try, it grew large in the damp season of 2008.
French Bean (*dwarf) Climbing beans come in many shapes and colours, so read
the small print. Blauhilde has lovely purple pods, Fortex (Really Cool Seeds)
has surprisingly long ones of good flavour. My favourite dwarf bean is Sonesta,
with waxy, yellow pods.
Garlic Once you have a harvest of bulbs that you like, I recommend keeping some
larger cloves to re-plant in early October, unless you have eaten them all for
breakfast (good on toast).
Green Manures* I grow none of these, preferring instead to plant or sow second
crops in July, August and until about mid September. Then I sow any spare ground,
from about mid September to mid October, with leaf radish, for possible use
as a salad, or broad bean Aquadulce Claudia, which provides an early crop if
it survives the winter, otherwise it will have helped provide soil cover.
Herbs* Chervil is delicious and misunderstood. When sown in July to mid August,
it crops for a long time if autumn is not too dry. Sow August to early September
for growing under cover through winter and until it flowers in early May.
Kale* For tenderness and eating raw, try Red Russian or Sutherland (Real Seeds).
For lovely red colours, grow Scarlet or Redbor F1 (expensive).
Leek* Swiss Giant and King Richard grow large in autumn, have less frost resistance
than Autumn Mammoth which itself has less frost resistance than Musselburgh,
Bandit etc. Read the small print to be sure of having a variety suitable for
the season in which you want to be eating leeks. Sow them all at the same time
in early to mid April.
Lettuce* So many choices if you look at smaller catalogues such as Tamar or
Tucker’s. Remember that Batavian and Romaine (cos) varieties can be picked
over as leaf lettuce, although they can also grow hearts. Here I mention only
Grenoble Red, for its abundant virtues – above average resistance to frost,
slugs and mildew, and an ability to grow for longer than most varieties when
its outer leaves are repeatedly picked off. If allowed to heart, it needs plenty
of water to avoid tipburn.
Onion* Until recently, onions were so easy to grow. Mildew has now become a
problem and I am growing onions from seed to avoid risking contamination from
sets. The best performer in 2008 was bulb onion Red Pearl.
Oriental Leaves* A big subject! They are best sown after the summer solstice,
to make more leaves and less flowers, and they like moist soil. The mustards
are pretty and of great flavour, especially Green and Red Streaks. Red Giant
is good for stir frying. Pak choi is adored by slugs but worth a try, while
leaf radish is the most vigorous of all, with mild, hairless leaves that keep
growing until year’s end, albeit slowly by then. Mizuna is another banker
for late autumn leaves, resisting most frost before winter becomes too earnest.
Parsnip White Gem is reliable, Gladiator F1 is longer, both have excellent flavour.
Buy fresh seed every year.
Pea* I love Sugar Snaps, whose fat pods are sweet and edible. Tall varieties
in general grow 6 feet (2m) or higher, and crop more heavily than dwarf ones.
They also crop for longer: an heirloom variety which I grew last year, Mr Brays,
provided an abundance of creamy peas for about six weeks.
Peppers, Sweet Like aubergines, best grown under cover. Sweet Banana bears many
fruit, long and of pale colour, ripening to orange. Sweet Baby Orange is good
for containers. There are many other good varieties, of chile too (Really Cool
Seeds).
Pumpkin Baby Bear is not too vigorous, making a medium sized, oval fruit, good
for carving, of average flavour. Rouge Vif D’Etamps is a much more straggling
plant capable of covering a large area and making medium sized, flatter, more
tasty fruits – but always of much less flavour than winter squashes -
and pumpkins’ softer skin means they also store less well.
Rhubarb Timperley Early keeps producing lovely red stalks by late winter and
throughout spring, our crowns are now eleven years old and doing well.
Spinach* I like Tarpy F1 for sowing in March when it grows vigorously. To have
green leaves in summer it more reliable to grow leaf beet or swiss chard. Spinach
for salad in winter can be had from Medania, Fuji or Oriento, sown in early
September, and grown under cover.
Tomato Sungold, an orange cherry, has a fine, refreshing sweetness and ripens
early. Sukaru F1, a red cherry, offers great flavour and yield. Ferline resists
some blight and its dark red, medium to large fruits are fleshy. Marmande is
ever reliable for beef tomatoes, Lido F1 (Tamar) showed promise in 2008 with
some huge tomatoes. All do best under cover, unless it is a hot summer…
Winter Squash Red (or Uchiki) Kuri trails and makes small red fruits of excellent
flavour, which manage to ripen in damp summers. Crown Prince’s blue-grey
fruits are of superb flavour, ripening a little later. Butternut’s tasty
fruits are hard to ripen unless summer is hot – their skins need to be
brown and hard if you want best flavour, and to keep them through winter.