Ebooks and Articles Gardening Articles Butterfly Garden Plant Hardiness Roses Cat Repellent
Gardening Gift Protecting Plants Tomatoes Shade Garden Soil Preparation Tree Ferns
Grow Organic Soil Improvements Fruit Trees Orchids Bonsai Gardens Butterfly Activity
Hummingbird Nectar Lawn Care Greenhouse Vermicomposting Compost Tea Vegetable Gardening
Mulch Compost Tumbler Wild Flowers Soil Perennials Seed
Succulents Fertilizers Nature Hills Nursery Items Internet Links

An Edible Flower Garden
 

Ultima Morpho Pansy

An Edible Flower Garden To most of us, the idea of eating flowers evokes the humorous image of someone biting into a rose, or chomping off the head of a daisy. Yet there was a time not so very long ago that flowers were an integral part of cooking. While most of us are aware that violets can be candied and nasturtiums eaten in salad, there’s a truly amazing variety of flowers that are not only edible, but delicious!

A Candy Flower Garden for Your Sweet Tooth Violets aren’t the only flower that can be candied! Many of the spring flowers with small, delicate blossoms have a sweet, slightly spicy flavor that is enhanced by dipping in sugar. It goes without saying that any flowers that you gather for eating should not have been sprayed with any pesticide – by growing them yourself, you can be sure that they’re untreated. A Candy Flower Garden that blooms throughout the summer can include:

Violets – of course! Purple, blue or white, violets are among the first flowers to bloom in the spring. They spread easily, and grow readily when transplanted into a garden bed – and you do want to confine them to a bed unless you love the look of a full carpet of blooms spreading across your lawn.

Pansy – A relative of violets, pansies are just as delicately flavored and can be used in most recipes that call for violets. They make beautiful border flowers, with their bright painted faces.

Angelica – These delicate, lacy white flowers can be sprinkled in salads – but the stems and shoots make a delicious traditional candy that tastes a bit like minty licorice.

Roses – yes, roses! Candied rose petals and rose syrup were mainstays in Victorian cooking. Sweet delicately flavored rose syrup gives baklava its characteristic flavor, and is a perfect foil for cardamom in Indian recipes.

To candy flowers from your garden:
Violets and pansies can be candied whole. Roses should be separated into petals. Most recipes for candied flowers call for the use of raw egg whites. Because of the danger of salmonella, I recommend using a confectioner’s powdered egg white instead.

Mix powdered egg white according to package directions (equivalent of one egg white). Spread a cup of superfine sugar in a flat bottomed pan. Carefully dip each flower into the egg white, then press into the sugar. Use a fork to gently turn the flower so that all surfaces of the petals are covered. Lift out of sugar and lay on a screen or drying rack till completely dry. Apple and cherry blossoms can also be candied the same way.

A Soup, Salad and Savory Flower Garden When I was growing up, one of the most special treats of early summer was my grandmother’s fried squash blossoms. Dipped in egg and flower, then fried in olive oil with garlic, the blossoms have a sweet, nutty flavor that is like nothing else in this world. Other garden flowers that are delicious in soups and salads include:

Borage – Like the leaves, borage flowers are delicious in salads and cold soups. They have a cool, cucumber like taste that translates well from flower garden to kitchen table.

Carnations – The flavor is as spicy as the scent. Carefully separate the petals from the bitter white of the flower’s base and sprinkle in salads for a surprising touch of color and spice.

Daylilies – Like squash blossoms, day lilies have a mildly sweet, nutty flavor that many people think varies by color. Dredged in flour and dipped in egg, fried daylilies are a succulent vegetable.

Those are just a small sampling of the many edible uses of flowers from your garden. If you’re interested in learning more, you’ll find excellent recipes and information on edible flowers at a number of web sites on the internet. DO be careful in your taste-testing. If you’re not certain that a flower is edible do NOT eat it.

I would like to invite you to visit this blog site of mine where I am sharing the plants that I grow and enjoy everyday at My Garden Pictures


Additional Articles on Edible Flowers:

  • Selection Of Delicious Edible Flowers
  • Want to make a start towards an organic lifestyle - How about adding edible flowers to your cooking. They are simple to grow or even better free, you may already have some of the varieties growing in your garden.

  • Edible Flowers
  • Here are two of the easiest edible flowers and one can even be color co-ordinated to match wedding gowns.

  • Edible Flowers
  • If the idea of eating flowers strikes you as fanciful or faintly ridiculous, how do you feel about broccoli? Or asparagus? These common vegetables are, in fact, immature flowers. And when you leave your broccoli in the garden too long and it develops yellow flowers, it is indeed still edible.


    jim ellison enterprises
    342 broken arrow
    floresville, texas 78114
    Emailto: jeb33@netzero.net






    |Ebooks and Articles| |Gardening Articles| |Butterfly Garden| |Edible Flower| |Plant Hardiness| |Roses| |Cat Repellent| |Gardening Gift| |Protecting Plants| |Tomatoes| |Shade Garden| |Soil Preparation| |Tree Ferns| |Grow Organic| |Soil Improvements| |Fruit Trees| |Orchids| |Bonsai Gardens| |Butterfly Activity| |Hummingbird Nectar| |Lawn Care| |Greenhouse| |Vermicomposting| |Compost Tea| |Vegetable Gardening| |Mulch| |Compost Tumbler| |Wild Flowers| |Soil| |Perennials| |Seed| |Succulents| |Fertilizers| |Nature Hills Nursery Items| |Internet Links|