I fancy growing some this year, any advice or tips please ? both for growing and eating !!
thanks
Hi
Well im not an expert but i have learnt to grow the smaller varieties and grow them near the green house door so that the pollinators can find them or else in a hot spot outside.
Sow them relatively early say end of feb as they are slow growing and watch out for the prickles.
good luck
x sunloving
I tried a small variety last year, had about 2 golf ball size fruits!, one plant on the allotment, one in a conservatory, and one in the garden, wont be growing them again!
Anyone tried hand pollinating them? I tried growing them outside one year; I got one two-inch aub, and wouldn't bother again.
Tried them in pots in the greenhouse. Won't bother again. Lots of other stuff to grow with better results and they are relatively cheap in the market.
I like the smaller fruiting ones they seem more more able to produce in a welsh summer! I find them a useful size to cook with too.
If you haven't got a greenhouse the patio ones do quite well in a pot in a warm sheltered spot. I feed mine the same as tomatoes. I agree with sunloving, start them early.
I'm upto several carrier bags a season... from about 8 tubs in a 8x6 greenhouse. Prefer the smaller ones and they are more successful in my hands... :)
Tried growing these in the greenhouse the last 4 years ,very poor results I'm with Lotte lou I can make better use of the space,particularly as Lidl were offering them for about 40p each :)
Blimey thats even cheaper than the market
It's an offer they have several times a year and their produce is really good.It's always fresh and well priced :)
Quote from: PeterVV on January 05, 2011, 20:46:17
I tried a small variety last year, had about 2 golf ball size fruits!, one plant on the allotment, one in a conservatory, and one in the garden, wont be growing them again!
Can't say I blame you...
Firstly - it's not a crop that is ever going to pay its way:
You always get the whole of your crop in the months when aubergines are cheap as chips in the shops.
If you grow standard varieties then they probably won't taste as good as greengrocer's stuff grown in Spain and other points south (though they will taste better than the crap from Dutch greenhouses).
Most years you will get nothing outside and nearly nothing under glass - last year was a FAIR year compared to 07, 08, 09 - but not good enough to get more than one fruit per plant - and that's from small-fruited kinds that can produce 6 or more in a good year!
Secondly - if you don't keep more than one plant in a place where bees can get to them then pollination can be a problem. No pollination - no fruit.
For enthusiasts and extreme optimists only!
Oh, and of course mine are organic whereas stuff from commercial greenhouses - is about as far as it's possible to get from that (legally)... or worse depending on the attitudes of the countries involved.
I keep saying this but this year is realy the last chance they get, if I don't get any fruit thats it.
I've been successful growing them in a cold greenhouse, starting them in a propagator in Feb - I've grown mainly Black Beauty but grew long purple as well last year - reckon on several good sized fruit per plant, no special treatment or hand pollination, just tomato food once set.
That's the successful part - my trouble has always been knowing when they were ripe! Oh, and they are DREADFULLY prickly. I'm going all goosey just thinking about it.
Give them a try - you might be one of the lucky ones!
Maybe saddad can give us a run down on what they do to get such sucess that would be great!
x sunloving
We start them off in March... pot up to 3" pots mid April and put out into florist buckets about Mid May... have them on the staging with a bit of that fabric stuff (brain melted!). Don't pollinate but feed like toms. Also have cucs in the same house (crystal apple etcetera..)... :)
Here I grow with some reasonable success Bonica,Money Maker and best of all Rosa Bianca as well as the longer types such as Thai Green.
All do well both inside and outside(with a little cloche protection to start).
There is no comparison with the imported stuff, which can be good I admit,but it`s just not as `meaty` as a home grown one.
Thankyou saddad and cleo for the tips.
Im going to give it another go :)
x sunloving
I had given up trying but I've got some Moneymaker this year to try.
thanks for the replys....saddad i'll give your way of doint it a whirl, how many fruits do you get from one plant ?
On the small palm sized ones between 12 and 20 per plant... :)
:) a thumbs up for Rosa Bianca from me to,also Pingtung Long (grew fine outside last year) and Thai Green , they taste so much better than shop bought ones./ shades x
Quote from: saddad on January 07, 2011, 17:00:11
On the small palm sized ones between 12 and 20 per plant... :)
being a novice in the kitchen, what uses do you have for them ? ive never eaten one before !
There are loads of recipes... OH does a mean beef and aubergine curry when we get a glut... :)
Had no harvest last year in greenhouse, so wasn't planning on aubergines for this year - but if anyone could let me have a couple of seeds for Pingtung or Thai Green I'll try them in pots on my south-facing patio.
Tricia
Is sucess linked to growing a set of plants together that allow polination to occur better, i know that my failed years ive had plenty of flowers but only fruit at the last minute. x sunloving
Quoteaubergines are cheap as chips in the shops.
They're always expensive and not very tasty in the greengrocers here!
It's a crop I'd love to have. But I'd always suspected that I wouldn't be able to get anything off them. Maybe one day I'll give it a go, but at the moment it takes all my energy to grow easy crops! :)
In terms of eating them, I'd say thorough cooking is the secret to tasty aubergines. They're a strange veg in that they taste completely different when well cooked, to when they're raw or less well-done. Even the texture changes from foamy to a bit tough and juicy (that's in a nice way!) You can get that quickly by par-boiling them for perhaps a minute, and then grilling or shallow frying them till brown and fragrant. Otherwise when you're hungry they seem to take an eternity to cook!
My favourite aubergine recipe is with Georgian walnut sauce called Pkhali, gorgeous for summer when there's lots of coriander leaves http://www.aubergines.org/recipes.php?eggplant=736 (http://www.aubergines.org/recipes.php?eggplant=736)
Quote from: sunloving on January 08, 2011, 09:36:14
Is sucess linked to growing a set of plants together that allow polination to occur better, i know that my failed years ive had plenty of flowers but only fruit at the last minute. x sunloving
I'm wondering about that as well Sunloving. Last year's attempts were worse than the year before! I have no greenhouse, and tried to give the plants wind protection, but I need to get my thinking cap on to figure out how I can grow them. I had hardly any flowers last year :'( What do others grow alongside them? Mine were next to cucumbers last year :-\
Agree with Pigeonseed (again !) about cooking them thoroughlly, I have friends who won't touch them cos of bad experiences eating undercooked aubergines. For other ideas look for Italian or Greek or Turkish recipes, loads of ideas there :)
i am sorry to hear you all having so much trouble growing them.
last year, i think i had 12 plants and i harvested 45 fruits .
But better get back planting the seeds of the eight different color aubergines i am growing this year.
if want you know the varieties and colors i am growing just ask.
Quote from: plainleaf on January 19, 2011, 20:06:07
i am sorry to hear you all having so much trouble growing them.
last year, i think i had 12 plants and i harvested 45 fruits .
But better get back planting the seeds of the eight different color aubergines i am growing this year.
if want you know the varieties and colors i am growing just ask.
I'm asking!!
Oh for goodness sake.... :-X
white: Casper
orange Turkish orange
green: apple green
red:red egg
black: black beauty
orange/green: striped toga
yellow :thai yellow egg
purple :Rosa Bianca
I've grown four of those varieties quite successfully in a cold greenhouse... :)
I have been quite pleased with Listada de Gandia the last two seasons.
Moderate-sized fruits, up to 10cm and quite decorative (purple / white .. a sort of marbled effect).
I put them outside on the plot in late May under cloches, removing the cloches in late June when the plants are bursting to get out. This is in Berks.
Long purple did better than I expected last year, even fruiting outdoors... suspect it was the very hot June we had pushe d it far enough along... I'll be doing it again this year, four in the polytunnel, four in the GH and a row of 8-10 outside I expect, or more likely a block acros four rows sharing the rest of the space with peppers....
chrisc
Aubergines are an absolute magnet for red spider under glass.
After last year's fiasco I'm never going to put them in the same area as tomatoes - misting keeps the red spider down but encourages blight in the toms.
This year I'm using two covers completely separated - aubergines with peppers - yes, peppers with tomatoes - yes, but aubergines and tomatoes definitely No!