All other veggies
Plant sale home | Cucumbers, squash, and melons | Herbs | Peas and beans | Peppers | Tomatoes | All other veggies | Edible flowers
Tomatillos
Purple2-4 oz. • 70 days • Purple A beautiful tomatillo with superb flavor whether eaten fresh from the plant, grilled or in salsa. Harvest should be done when the fruits are golf ball-sized, and the papery husk has split. More sunshine will produce a more purple fruit. Note: Tomatillos are not self-pollinating, so planting 2 or more tomatillo plants in your garden will help ensure the blooms will be pollinated.¹ |
|
Verde Green3-6 oz. • 60 days • Green This tomatillo is a heavy and early producer and a wonderful choice for salsa verde since the larger fruits are easier to prepare. Note: Tomatillos are not self-pollinating, so planting 2 or more tomatillo plants in your garden will help ensure the blooms will be pollinated.¹ |
Leafy greens
Chard - Bright Lights52 days • Green and multicolor • 20" • Good for containers Leaf stalks with colored yellow, gold, orange, pink, crimson or purple. Lighter, milder flavor compared to other chards. Somewhat less frost hardy than other chards, but will overwinter in mild climates. As leaves are harvested, plant will continue to produce new leaves. Good for containers. Photo: sk / CC BY-ND 2.0 |
|
Chard - Fordhook Giant50 days • Green • Heirloom Biennial Heirloom. Truly superior green chard for farm and garden. Heavily crumpled, very dark glossy green leaves with broad white succulent stems.³ |
|
Kale - Lacinato65-80 days • Green • Heirloom Biennial Heirloom. This kale is heavily savoyed (bumpy) strap-shaped, dark green, almost black, leaves. Add an interesting texture and color to salads. Photo: J. Aldrich / CC BY 2.0 |
|
Kale - Redbor75 days • Purple Extremely cold tolerant, "Redbor's" purple color and curliness intensifies, and flavor sweetens as temperatures drop in the fall; plants can last even through hard freezes. Photo: T. Hall / CC BY-SA 2.0 |
|
Arugula - Rocket38 days • Green • Slow bolting Has has strap-shaped leaves, less deeply lobed than many, with a milder flavor. Heat tolerant and slow to bolt, it still prefers the cold soil of early spring and fall. Plant in fertile, moist, well-draining soil in full sun to part shade.9 |
Eggplants
Black Beauty5-6" • 65 days • Purple • 30" tall The very popular, classic Italian eggplant with bell-shaped fruits that are glossy when mature. The plants are compact and very productive so a stake for extra support is advised.⁴ |
|
CalliopeHarvest at 2-4" • 64 days • Purple A beautiful, oval, Indian eggplant. Suitable for baby or mature harvest. High-yielding, even in the North. The plants and calyxes are spineless, unlike many varieties of this type.¹ |
|
GretelHarvest at 3-4" • 55 days • White • 24-36" tall Japanese type. Specialty mini eggplant with loads of tender, bitter-free fruits on a compact plant. Photo: Kel and Val / CC BY 2.0 |
|
Long Purple8-10" • 75 days • Purple Long fruits have a thinner skin, fewer seeds, and more delicate flavor than traditional varieties.⁸ |
|
Millionaire8-9" • 50-59 days • Green Japanese type. Tender, meaty full of flavor, wonderful eggplant from the South. Will benefit from some support to handle all those long tasty eggplants. Perfect for braising or ratatouille.³ |
|
Nadia7-8" • 67 days • Purple Traditional black Italian type; the uniform fruits are glossy and blemish free. Tall, sturdy plants can set fruit under cool conditions.⁴ |
Catalog photo credits: UC Master Gardeners—1P. Dimas, 2P. Joki, 3D. Laner, 4T. Loftus, 5G. Myers, 6S. Wentz, 7S. Wood, 8C. Yip, 9Unknown UC Master Gardener of Alameda County.