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This week in your Kitchen Garden.

Broccoli seed is quite expensive and radish probably has more of the magic sulphurophane - but they're too firey to eat in any quantity.

Abstract:
Radish sprouts and broccoli sprouts have been implicated in having a potential chemoprotective effect against certain types of cancer. Each contains a glucosinolate that can be broken down to an isothiocyanate capable of inducing chemoprotective factors known as phase 2 enzymes. In the case of broccoli, the glucosinolate, glucoraphanin, is converted to an isothiocyanate, sulforaphane, while in radish a similar glucosinolate, glucoraphenin, is broken down to form the isothiocyanate, sulforaphene. When sprouts are consumed fresh (uncooked), however, the principal degradation product of broccoli is not the isothiocyanate sulforaphane, but a nitrile, a compound with little anti-cancer potential. By contrast, radish sprouts produce largely the anti-cancer isothiocyanate, sulforaphene. The reason for this difference is likely to be due to the presence in broccoli (and absence in radish) of the enzyme cofactor, epithiospecifier protein (ESP). In vitro induction of the phase 2 enzyme, quinone reductase (QR), was significantly greater for radish sprouts than broccoli sprouts when extracts were self-hydrolysed. By contrast, boiled radish sprout extracts (deactivating ESP) to which myrosinase was subsequently added, induced similar QR activity to broccoli sprouts. The implication is that radish sprouts have potentially greater chemoprotective action against carcinogens than broccoli sprouts when hydrolysed under conditions similar to that during human consumption.


RADISH SPROUTS VERSUS BROCCOLI SPROUTS: A COMPARISON OF ANTI-CANCER POTENTIAL BASED ON GLUCOSINOLATE BREAKDOWN PRODUCTS
 
No, don't do that Artaxerxes - there are ways to combat this (as I know, having dealt with moth, sawfly and bloody aphids on my (badly sited) plum. Means losing any organic purity though (I lost mine years ago). With a couple of well-timed sprays (pick a still day in June). A spraying of any of the various pesticides (I use deltamethrin, mostly, but there are others) andf a follow-up in about 3-4 weeks or so will do the trick. Thereb are pheromone traps but these are NOT for control, just to let you know when the moths are active, therefore when to spray.
Rant warning:
I have to say, although organic gardeners may well work with nature, the ones on my allotment plot are the fucking worst bunch of smug, useless bastards. Organic appears to equate with 'do nothing' - they harbour disease, infected and infested plants they take zero precautions to avoid spreading and propagating pests, they give me no end of grief at the sight of a sprayer (fuck them). Worse than smug vegans by a country mile since the whole site has to pay for their ubiquitous neglect (onion rot, raspberry cane blight, blackcurrant big bud mite - all increased and spread by the 'organic' twats and plant-huggers who consider timely culling to be some sort of green sin against nature. Have not been able to grow raspberries for a decade and blackcurrant mite is now so ubiquitous, I have grubbed mine out because there is no cure or spray for this.
 
I used to but those plum fly traps up when I had the allotment and thought they were very effective . Agree with you about the organic gardeners though absolute menace .
 
Well I've managed to get a few survivors. It's just annoying how hard it is to work out what's edible and what's not.

We are pretty much organic on our plot but I do a fair bit of weeding and trying to watch out for pests. Had to get some chemicals to deal with ants farming aphids and pulling up a few chocolate fungus infested beans this year.

Today had to deal with trimming back some squash, the last week's rains caused a bit of mildew to spring up which is annoying.
 
I don't whip out the sprayers at the drop of a hat but if you grow a lot of fruit (I do) then, at some point, you will encounter some nasty fungi - peach leaf curl has been the most pernicious. I probably would not have planted either almonds or nectarines and gone for the more resilient apricots, had I known in advance. Aphids are generally just unsightly...but annual attacks will really weaken a tree. In general, vegetables are largely annuals and can be easily disposed of...but investing in long-term projects such as blackcurrants is just heartbreaking when your carefully raised plants inevitably succumb to Big Bud and reversion. My best defence has been to grow different fruit from my neighbours (saskatoons, goldenberries, aronia). Filberts are also madly productive and seemingly pest free.
 
Weather has sorted itself out a bit today so been out in the garden this afternoon. The Chili's are look just about ready to harvest hopefully. The (what I've called) floor squash just keeps on getting bigger so no idea when that will ready. Mrs motown tells me it's a crown prince pumpkin if anyone has any experience with them?

Have also filled the main planter with some leaks which we did well with last year so hope they will work out well again over winter.
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We thought we’d forgotten to plant melons this year and only planted cucumbers but I found this earlier so it looks like plants got mixed up and the melons shoved outside not in the mini-greenhouse.


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Bit of a haul this week.

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After thinking of giving up and cutting them back the butternut squash have finally started to get little fruits on them. It’s only taken over most of the back row to get there though... (we saved the seeds from one we had for dinner back in spring so was starting to think it wasn’t viable)

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Potatoes dug up - not great size or volume , but tasty - and about 50 onion sets placed in. Chillies good and runner beans about to end.

Not too much effort this year to be fair , but it all helps.
 
Tomatoes are finally ripe and they are lush. We oven dried them and preserved a big batch in oil at weekend.

We're still being buried under Patty Pan squash as well, can't keep up.
 
I never water tomatoes...so recent deluges have caused mine to split. Pulled them all yesterday to avoid the inevitable forests of volunteers next spring - soup for dinner.
 
Weather has sorted itself out a bit today so been out in the garden this afternoon. The Chili's are look just about ready to harvest hopefully. The (what I've called) floor squash just keeps on getting bigger so no idea when that will ready. Mrs motown tells me it's a crown prince pumpkin if anyone has any experience with them?

Have also filled the main planter with some leaks which we did well with last year so hope they will work out well again over winter.
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I like your slatey paths.
 
Forks sake! :eek:

Out of interest, how did you prepare the bed before sowing?

I grew them in containers and used standard all-purpose compost which I made sure was very fine. I'm inclined to think it was the fish, blood and bone I added that made them fork - too rich for them, maybe?
 
I grew them in containers and used standard all-purpose compost which I made sure was very fine. I'm inclined to think it was the fish, blood and bone I added that made them fork - too rich for them, maybe?
Too rich sounds the likely problem.

I've had good results growing carrots in containers, and just add a layer of garden compost on the surface before sowing into that.

I'm trying to move towards no dig, or at least minimal dig, growing, and I've read that not disturbing the soil can improve root development generally, including non-forking.
 
Cheers andysays , I'll keep it simple next time. I'm still relatively new to this so I'll call it (yet another) learning experience. I've grown some beauties in the past too.
 
I didn't thin my parsnips this year, resulting in carrot sized roots instead of the hoary monsters of the past...but, for the first time ever, I ate them with relish instead of guiltily tossing the fibrous, starchy behemoths into the worm bin.

They grow well in soil which has previously hosted potatoes.
 
Tomato seedlings up. This first batch are last years seed - haven't ordered anything new this year. A few millefleur (very bizarre) types up - will just grow a couple of vines in the greenhouse. As usual, the early shows are all the cherry tomatoes (apart from Harbinger, a very old strain). Currently growing: Harbinger, Stupice (instead of Matina - another early blight-buster), Large Cherry, Chadwick Cherry (my favourite), Black Plum, Tres Cantos (Ketchup), Ambrosia Red, Bloody Butcher (another potato leaved variety) Piccolo and Sungold (for the fam), Moskvych (sp?) and Black Opal. I may order another couple of new (to me) strains. Anyone else pondering the seed catalogues?
Potatoes chitting, lists being made...the vernal equinox is my usual date for the first veggie sowings (beetroot, carrots, spring onions, celery, chard, lettuces so it's all weeding, paths and edging.
 
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