Edible Organic Flowers Des Moines IA

Calendula petals have a zesty or peppery flavor, according to Urezzio. You can use them in soups or rice dishes," she says. "They work wonderfully if you're making herb butters or salads. The petals will add a yellow color to the dishes.

Drake Neighborhood Farmers Market
(515) 277-6951
First Christian Church, 25th & University
Des Moines, IA
Downtown Farmers Market
(515) 286-4928
Court Avenue & 4th Street
Des Moines, IA
Capitol Hill Farmers Market
(515) 262-4763
800 E. 12th Street
Des Moines, IA
Urbandale Farmers Market
(515) 278-5286 ext. 125
Living History Farms, 2600 111th Street Living History Farms, 2600 111th St
Urbandale, IA
Four Mile Farmers Market
(515) 248-6310
Four Mile Community Center; 3711 Easton Avenue
Des Moines, IA
The Homestead
(515) 957-3361
Pleasant Hill, IA
Fox Fire Acres CSA
(515) 306-8130
Des Moines, IA
Highland Park Farmers Market
(515) 288-1735
6th Avenue from Euclid to Douglas on west side of street
Des Moines, IA
Eastside Farmers Market
(515) 238-5748
3200 Delaware Avenue
Des Moines, IA
West Glen Farmers Market
(515) 979-9927
Avenue of the Arts in West Glen Town Center; 5525 Mills Civic Parkway
West Des Moines, IA
Data Provided by:
 
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Indulge in Summer's Edible Organic Flowers

edible flowers The calendula has a zesty or peppery flavor that complements soups, salads, rice dishes and herb butters.

If heiress/pop-culture diva Paris Hilton was exhausting her 15 minutes of fame in ancient Rome, her ladies-in-waiting would be serving her dishes flavored with saffron threads - the most expensive spice on the planet - while the rest of us might garnish our mere-mortal plates with calendula (Calendula officinalis, often referred to as the "pot marigold" or "poor man's saffron").

Edible flowers have been used in international kitchens for thousands of years. You can grind them into a powder, to be used as a spice, or adorn an elegant dish with brilliantly hued petals. Purchase edible flowers at an organic market, spice store, nursery or farmer's market, or start an organic gardening project that brightens your backyard. You can search for an organic farmer's market in your area through Local Harvest or for a nursery through Plant Search Online .

According to OFA-an Association of Floriculture Professionals , the top 10 edible flowers are calendula, chives, daylily, mint, nasturtium, pansy, rose, sage, signet marigold and squash blossoms. Other favorites include chrysanthemum, dandelion, hibiscus, honeysuckle, lavender, sunflower, tulip and violet.

Summer is an ideal time to begin organic gardening, and calendula - a hardy annual that produces orange or yellow flowers on a long stem - is one of the easiest edible flowers to grow, according to Jennifer Urezzio, founder of Blooming Grove Herbal Remedies .

"Calendulas will flower from mid-summer until the frost," she tells OrganicAuthority.com . "The normal height of the plants is 24 inches, and they like well-drained, light, sandy soil and full sun. Start the seeds now. By mid-summer, they will be blooming. Cover the seeds lightly with Ľ" of organic garden soil. They sprout and grow quickly. Make sure you place them in an area where you'll want to see them year after year because these plants will drop their seeds. I have grown these flowers in pots, as well. Water them once or twice a week - more if the weather has been dry."

geraniums on cake
Organic Edible Flower Cake

Calendula petals have a zesty or peppery flavor, according to Urezzio.

"You can use them in soups or rice dishes," she says. "They work wonderfully if you're making herb butters or salads. The petals will add a yellow color to the dishes."

Gather violets (Viola odorata) and garnish deviled eggs, says Dr. Ty Harrison, a professor and chair of the Biology Department at Westminster College in Salt Lake City, Utah. He adds them to lemon gelatin and green salads, and "they can also be candied with egg white and sugar to decorate cakes and desserts," he tells OrganicAuthority.com .

"My wife and I grow the common showy milkweed (Asclepias speciosa) in our backyard to make milkweed-flower fritters," he adds. "Small clusters of milkweed flowers are picked at their peak in early summer. We dip them in a light batter and deep-fry t...

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