Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Growing Food from Kitchen Scraps: Romaine Lettuce

Growing lettuce from the lettuce stump that you would normally throw away is relatively easy. Simply leave a stump, approximately two inches tall, and place it in water. I change the water every day, and within a couple of days, it will begin to grow. After about 2 weeks, you can plant it outside.

Harvest the leaves as needed, or you can also just chop the whole top off again, and leave it planted. Because it does not have to reestablish roots, it will regrow faster than the previous time. The best part about this is that if you have a lettuce stump to regrow every week, you should be able to eventually harvest an entire head of lettuce every week. It will not get as large as what you see in the grocery store, but it is surprising how much it will grow.

If you notice that the lettuce begins to grow very tall, and starts to have small flower pods develop at the top, you will want to cut this section off. If you do not, the leaves will begin to taste bitter. This portion of the plant produces seeds. When a plant goes to seed, you can use this to get seeds for a crop next year, but if you are not interested in seeds, allowing a plant to go to seed will simply make it taste bad.

Of course, I did not know this, as this was my first time growing lettuce, so I was just excited that I grew something so well that it started to flower :) . As you can see below, I started growing lettuce every week or two, so that I could continuously harvest them, and the one in the back left corner has "gone to seed", and will be bitter and taste bad (but I could collect seeds from this plant).


In addition to being (what I consider to be) amazing to watch grow in such a short period of time, this would be a great way to reduce your expenses, and to also have control over what you eat. By growing your own food, you can ensure that your produce is fresh, and also have it close at hand whenever you are cooking. I have also started growing herbs as well, and I have found that cooking is much more fun when you can go outside to grab whatever ingredients you would like to experiment with. They taste better than what you get from the store, and the fact that I grew them at home gives me a great sense of satisfaction. I will go over how to grow herbs more in a future post, but I would absolutely recommend saving your kitchen scraps, and seeing what you can get to grow at home!

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for posting this! I never knew what a fully grown "regrown" romaine looks like because many people only post pics of romaine regrowing in water up to the point of transplantation.

    The fully grown romaine is so cute! The leaves are like baby romaine and the flower stalk is nice. Thank you again for sharing. Please share more about your other "gardening from scraps" photos. :)

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