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The Lebanese Green Finger cucumber is a variety prized for its delicate flavor, sweetness, and uniformity. It produces elongated, slender, and straight fruits with smooth, dark green skin, almost seedless when harvested young. Their flesh is crisp, juicy, and free of bitterness, making it a very pleasant cucumber to eat fresh.
The plant is vigorous and productive, offering a continuous harvest when the fruit is picked regularly. It can be grown on the ground or trained on a trellis, which facilitates aeration, fruit cleanliness, and harvesting. Green Finger particularly thrives when grown vertically.
In the garden, this variety thrives in warm, sunny locations and rich, well-drained soil. Regular growth, without water stress, results in uniform fruit of consistent quality. Its tolerance and productivity make it an excellent choice for gardeners seeking a reliable and flavorful cucumber.
The Rocquencourt Butter dwarf bean is a heritage variety of French origin, renowned for its reliability and the remarkable quality of its pods. The compact plants, with their upright growth habit, quickly form neat and easy-to-maintain rows, typical of well-structured dwarf beans.
They produce tasty, smooth, uniform, golden-yellow beans, generally measuring 12 to 17 cm in length. These pods are free of parchment, the tough fiber sometimes found on certain beans, giving them a particularly tender and pleasant texture, even at a slightly later stage of harvest.
In the garden, Beurre de Rocquencourt stands out for its exceptional performance, even under more demanding growing conditions. This variety demonstrates good tolerance to humid and relatively cool climates, where other beans may struggle to produce. This hardiness makes it a reliable choice for unpredictable seasons or vegetable gardens subjected to prolonged periods of rain.
Harvested regularly, it offers a generous and consistent production, ideal for gardeners looking for a reliable, tasty butter bean that is easy to integrate into a vegetable rotation.
In the local area, the Rocquencourt Butter bean is seen as a reliable plant. It embodies the qualities of well-selected heritage varieties: consistency, adaptability, and the simple pleasure of successful harvests, even when conditions are not ideal.
Originating from European market gardening traditions, the Petit Provençal pea is a dwarf variety of garden pea that has naturally found its place in gourmet vegetable gardens. Its green pods, neatly arranged on compact plants, offer small, round, sweet peas that are harvested in the freshness of spring or early summer.
In the garden, this variety stands out for its low, regular growth habit, which makes it easy to care for and harvest in a manageable, productive space. It integrates well into a vibrant garden, whether planted along a border or as a low hedge, and contributes to the cycle of the seasons by gently and undemandingly enriching the soil with nitrogen. It's a reliable plant for anyone wishing to rediscover the age-old practice of sowing peas as soon as the soil becomes receptive in spring.
Originating in France, the 'Red Cored Chantenay' carrot is an heirloom variety distinguished by its light red core and sweet flesh. Traditionally cultivated for its hardiness and pronounced flavor, it now finds its place in organic vegetable gardens, where its stocky shape and contrasting color attract attention.
In the garden, this carrot offers a generous and reassuring character: it adapts to heavy soils and provides a reliable harvest in late summer. Its compact habit and dense foliage make it an ideal companion plant for diversifying crop rotations. Its color appeals to both gourmets and gardeners who appreciate natural beauty.
Native to North America , the Ponca Baby Butternut squash is a variety of butternut squash prized for its small size, vigor, and naturally sweet flavor . Named in honor of the Ponca people , it embodies a cultural heritage rooted in the subsistence gardens of the Great Plains. Its compact shape , smooth beige skin , and melting orange flesh make it a valuable food source in climates with short growing seasons.
In the garden, it exhibits rapid and robust growth , adapting well to both open spaces and small vegetable patches. One of the most appreciated traits of this variety is its natural diversity of sizes : small, medium, and large fruits coexist on the same plant , allowing for harvesting as needed—for a daily meal or for preserving. This advantage makes it a versatile variety , well-suited to the needs of families , whether for a quick meal or for winter storage.
Easy to grow, the Ponca offers a generous and early harvest , ideal for organic vegetable gardens. Roasted, in a gratin, in soup, or mashed, its dense, sweet flesh fully reveals the warm flavors of autumn. Its good winter storage capacity makes it a valuable ally for self-sufficient kitchens.
Originating in Russia , the Early Russian pickling cucumber is a traditional and hardy variety , prized for its small, firm, crisp, and non-bitter fruits , which can be enjoyed from the first weeks of summer . Renowned for its early maturity , it is among the first cucumbers to be harvested from the garden , offering abundant yields even at the beginning of the season.
When young, it can be eaten fresh, in salads or simply eaten raw , revealing a tender, juicy flesh with no bitterness whatsoever. It is also perfect for pickling , thanks to its compact size and slightly pungent skin which retains aromas well during fermentation or pickling.
In the garden, it stands out for its vigorous growth , dense foliage, and resilience to the variable conditions of a temperate climate. Compact in size, it integrates easily into an organic vegetable garden , contributing both to summer abundance and the preservation of culinary traditions.
Native to North America, Parris Island Cos romaine lettuce is known for its hardiness and its ability to add crispness and freshness to salads. This variety has become a staple in organic vegetable gardens thanks to its majestic appearance and dense foliage, offering excellent resilience to the vagaries of the climate.
In the garden, it stands out with its upright habit and elongated, light green leaves with pronounced veins, promising a firm texture and a mild, slightly sweet flavor. Versatile and prolific, it integrates harmoniously into a vegetable garden where it adds a touch of verticality and a constant source of flavor.
Originating from North American breeding programs, the Oregon Sugar Pod snow pea has become a favorite in vegetable gardens in regions with cool springs. It's a flat-podded pea, harvested whole before the peas develop too much, to enjoy its tenderness and sweetness.
In the garden, its tender green foliage clings to slender supports with its tendrils, creating a small edible hedge that discreetly accompanies the cycle of the seasons. In welcoming, well-drained soil, it offers a beautiful, consistent yield: the pods appear one after another, inviting regular harvesting, an age-old practice that punctuates the daily pleasure of gardening.
In a thriving garden, this pea contributes to the diversity of legumes, while also playing a vital role in providing sustenance for the household. Its benevolent presence fits naturally into a deeply rooted approach to respectful cultivation, where one learns to observe, understand, and act in harmony with the cool climate of early season.
Originating in the Mediterranean, the Ruby Queen beetroot has established itself as a traditional variety prized for its deep red flesh and sweet flavor. This fleshy root, very common in European vegetable gardens, is also a valuable ally for gardeners seeking an easy and bountiful crop.
In the garden, Ruby Queen is prized for its hardiness and rapid growth. Its dark green, slightly veined foliage develops in a rosette, while its smooth, spherical roots yield tender, sweet flesh, ideal for a multitude of culinary preparations. This variety is also valued for its excellent storage qualities, offering a long season of enjoyment.
Prized by those who appreciate color and sweetness in the vegetable garden, the Ruby Queen beetroot brings finesse and deliciousness to autumn harvests. Its role is also to enrich the soil with its root system, while adding color and life to the garden's biodiversity.
Garden dill is a delicate and expressive aromatic plant, recognizable by its finely cut foliage and characteristic aniseed fragrance. From its very first appearance, it brings a visual and sensory lightness to the garden, swaying gently in the breeze on its supple stems.
Cultivated since antiquity, Anethum graveolens is valued for both its leaves and seeds. In the garden, it behaves as a warm-season annual, growing quickly but relatively short. It prefers sunny locations and well-drained soil, where it can fully express its aroma.
Dill integrates easily into vegetable gardens and mixed flower beds. It grows well alongside cucumbers, lettuce, or cabbage, while attracting a variety of beneficial insects when it flowers. Its yellow umbels of blossoms add a graphic touch and support biodiversity.
Elne celery is a hardy and productive variety, deeply rooted in its native terroir. Originating in the south of France, in the Pyrénées-Orientales, it takes its name from the town of Elne, located in the heart of the Roussillon plain. This southern origin gives it a distinctive character and an excellent capacity for adaptation when grown in good conditions.
The plant develops long, fleshy stalks that are perfectly smooth and round, distinguished by their firmness and visual appeal. Their texture is firm yet tender, and their flavor is particularly rich, marked by unique aromatic notes that have made this variety famous. Harvested at maturity, Elne celery offers a remarkable taste experience, both bold and balanced.
In the garden, this variety thrives in deep, rich, and consistently moist soils. Its relative hardiness and productivity make it a reliable celery choice, provided it receives regular growth and protection from water stress. When properly managed, it produces vigorous, uniform plants whose quality rivals the best traditional selections.
In the local area, Elne celery is seen as a plant of terroir and precision. It reminds us that certain varieties carry within them a strong local history, and that fidelity to growing conditions allows their full aromatic finesse and generosity to be revealed.
Originating in Central America, the cradle of bean domestication for millennia, this mixed dwarf bean blend brings together three of the most popular vegetable varieties, carefully selected for their vigor, flavor, and beauty. This combination of shapes, colors, and textures offers a vibrant display from sowing to harvest, blending green, yellow, or purple pods with beans in a variety of hues.
In the garden, this mix proves to be a true ally for nourishment. Thanks to its compact habit and rapid growth, it integrates easily into small spaces, container gardening, or crop rotations. Each plant contributes to soil enrichment through nitrogen fixation, while respecting the principles of the Ecumene Approach. Robust, easy to maintain, and productive, it charms gardeners with its aesthetic appeal as much as its usefulness. This mix is an invitation to cultivate diversity to strengthen the resilience of organic vegetable gardens.
Belonging to the large family of Italian plum-type tomatoes, the Roma tomato has established itself as a reliable companion in kitchen gardens. Its elongated, smooth, and deep red fruits evoke the age-old chores of simmering sauces and summer preserves.
In the garden, Roma stands out for its rather compact growth habit and consistent production. Its regular clusters bear numerous uniform fruits, easy to pick and process. It is a hardy yet generous variety, prized for its firm, slightly watery flesh, ideal for sauces, preserves, and drying.
Garden chives are an essential perennial plant, prized for their simplicity, hardiness, and abundance. They quickly form dense clumps of fine, cylindrical, bright green leaves, which regrow continuously when harvested regularly.
In spring, it's among the first to emerge in the vegetable garden, heralding the start of the season. In early summer, pretty, spherical, mauve-pink flowers appear, adding an ornamental touch while attracting pollinators. These flowers, like the leaves, are edible and bring a delicate note to dishes.
In the garden, chives are very tolerant. They adapt well to vegetable gardens, flower beds, borders, and container gardening. Undemanding, they do, however, appreciate cool, well-drained soil to reach their full potential. Once established, they can remain in place for several years without losing quality.
Small in size but big in presence, the Red Robin tomato – a Martin Lejardinier lineage – was born from an act of patience and passion. Selected for over ten years in an apartment by Martin Lejardinier, an emblematic figure of indoor gardening, this rare lineage now reaches us with the quiet strength of a plant that has learned to live alongside us, under lights or under the summer sky.
Originating from a heritage variety with diverse roots – in England, the United States, and the Andes – Red Robin has been cultivated indoors for generations, becoming a trusted plant , adaptable to even the smallest patch of light. Compact, robust, and vibrant , it forms a small sphere of greenery 20 to 30 cm in diameter, perfect for pots, planters, and windowsills .
Its dense foliage and early clusters quickly become covered in small, bright red tomatoes with thin skin and a juicy texture. In a productive indoor garden or on a shared terrace, it embodies the promise of an accessible and joyful harvest , even in winter.
Born from a passionate project and meticulous selection, the William Prescott variegated pepper embodies the union of expertise, patience, and creativity. This variety, the result of several rigorous crossbreedings and a long stabilization process, is also a living tribute: finalized on the day of little William's birth, it embodies the profound connection between the garden and the life that takes root there.
In an educational vegetable garden or a space that fosters a sense of community, this pepper thrives consistently. Its variegated green and white foliage brightens the rows, while its upright habit, sometimes enhanced by light pruning, adds attractive structure to the space. It appreciates warmth and well-warmed soil, where it develops elongated fruits that are initially green with white stripes, which then turn a vibrant orange adorned with cream stripes.
A plant of trust, it perfectly complements gardening experiences based on observation, respect for the seasonal rhythm and the living transmission of knowledge.
Native to the highlands of South America, the Giant Ground Cherry ( Physalis peruviana ) is prized for its golden fruit enclosed in a lantern-shaped calyx , resembling a small, leafy jewel box. This variety is distinguished by its larger berries compared to its relatives , with a vibrant citrus flavor blended with tropical sweetness , almost candied.
In the garden, it reveals a generous and sunny personality , with its golden-brown papery husks contrasting with the bright orange of the fruit. Cultivated as an annual in Quebec, it is nevertheless perennial in its native habitat , and can, for adventurous gardeners, be kept dormant in a dry location and then replanted the following spring.
More demanding than its cousin Physalis pruinosa , it requires warmth and patience , but rewards amply with its decorative abundance and incomparable richness of flavor. A true talismanic fruit in a bountiful garden, it is ornamental, delicious, and a source of wonder.
Native to the Mediterranean basin, Italian parsley with its large, flat leaves has become a staple in kitchen gardens. Its deep green, finely cut clumps provide a discreet yet constant presence in the vegetable patch, always ready to offer a handful of fresh greens for everyday cooking.
In the garden, this so-called "Italian" variety is distinguished by its particularly fragrant foliage, highly prized in cooking. It thrives along the edge of flowerbeds, in a quiet corner of the vegetable garden, or mixed with other aromatic plants to create a vibrant, nourishing space. Its consistent yield throughout the season makes it a reliable plant for ecological gardening, where harvesting is done as needed while respecting the natural cycle of the seasons.
The red alpine strawberry is a perennial variety prized for its delicate fruit and intense aroma. Unlike large-fruited strawberry varieties, it produces small, conical, bright red strawberries with a highly fragrant taste reminiscent of wild strawberries. Their flavor is concentrated, sweet, and slightly tart.
The plant forms compact clumps of bright green, toothed leaves that spread gently over the seasons. With little or no vining habit depending on the variety, it devotes its energy to flowering and fruiting rather than producing stolons, making it easy to integrate into vegetable gardens, borders, and container gardening.
In the garden, the red alpine strawberry is robust and adaptable. It thrives in rich, well-drained soil that is kept consistently moist, and prefers a sunny to partially shaded location. Production is extended over a long period, often from early summer until the first cool weather, provided it is harvested regularly.
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