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Regrowing Vegetables from Their Bases — Free Greens from Kitchen Scraps
Don't bin the root end of your celery, lettuce, leek or bok choy — regrow it. Stand the base in a little water on a windowsill and new leaves push up from the middle within days. Harvest the tender regrowth, or pot it into soil for a lasting plant. A buildable school project in the crown, and a satisfying way to cut food waste.
Principiante
About a week to regrow
Istruzioni
1
1
Don't throw away the base
Don't throw away the base
The bottom few centimetres of a celery head, a lettuce, a leek or a bok choy — the root end you normally throw out — still holds the plant's living heart. Give it water and light and it pushes out fresh new leaves within days, for free, from what was rubbish.
2
2
Keep the root end
Keep the root end
When you use the vegetable, cut it off about 3-5 cm up from the bottom and save that base with its little root plate intact. Celery, lettuce, bok choy, pak choi, leeks, spring onions and fennel all work.
Materiali per questo passaggio:
Celery1 head
Bok Choy1 head3
3
Stand it in shallow water
Stand it in shallow water
Sit the base cut-side UP in a shallow dish or glass with just a centimetre or two of water — enough to wet the root plate but not drown the whole thing. Put it on a bright, warm windowsill.
Materiali per questo passaggio:
Clean Glass Jars with Lids1 pezzo4
4
Change the water daily
Change the water daily
Freshen the water every day or two so it doesn't turn slimy and rot the base. Very soon you'll see roots feeling down into the water and, more excitingly, tender new green leaves unfurling from the CENTRE of the base.
5
5
Harvest — or pot it on
Harvest — or pot it on
In water alone the plant lives off its own stored food, so snip the fresh inner leaves within a week or so before it tires. For a plant that keeps giving, once it has roots pot the base into soil, where it can feed properly — leeks and spring onions especially will grow on and on.
Materiali per questo passaggio:
Potting Soil1 bag6
6
Compendium — regrowing from the crown
Compendium — regrowing from the crown
This is not quite the same as rooting a cutting, and the difference is the point. A cutting is a piece of stem with NO growing tip that has to build a whole new plant from scratch. A saved vegetable base already contains the plant's CROWN — the compressed growing point (meristem) at the centre, sitting on a short basal stem, exactly the same living heart a bulb keeps on its basal plate. That meristem was never removed; it simply resprouts, pushing new leaves straight up from the middle using the food and water still stored in the base. That is why regrowth is so fast (there's a ready-made growing tip, no waiting for it to form) and why the new leaves appear from the centre, not the cut edges. It's also why WATER alone is only a short-term trick: the base is spending its savings, so it fades after one flush — to keep it growing you must pot it into soil, where roots can draw real nutrients, just as a saved onion or leek base will carry on for months in the ground. Plants with a persistent basal crown regrow best (celery, leeks, spring onions, lettuces, bok choy, lemongrass), while things propagated other ways — a carrot's top will make leaves and flowers but never a new carrot, because the root itself can't reform. It's the same living-crown principle behind dividing a clump or separating a bulb's offsets, shrunk to a windowsill and powered by scraps — the easiest, cheapest propagation there is, and a small daily lesson in how little a plant needs to keep going.
Materiali
4- 1 headSegnaposto
- 1 headSegnaposto
- 1 pezzoSegnaposto
- 1 bagSegnaposto
You can swap these in
Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.
- Instead of Clean Glass Jars with Lids, try:
Glass Bottles with Lids
Dark Glass Jars with Airtight Lids
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