Michelle Bruhn's Blog: Forks in the Dirt, page 6
January 20, 2023
Growing Ginger in the North!

Like anything you grow at home- ginger just tastes better than store bought. And with how much I love ginger’s bold and distinct flavor of course I grow it. Plus, growing an exotic, tropical plant up in zones 3 and 4 is pretty darn empowering.
Then there���s the fact that most ginger sold in the U.S. is imported from China, Brazil or Thailand���and has been grown without much regulation and then shipped thousands of miles. Add in that is a beautiful plant that smells amazing and you���ve got to try growing this at least once!
Ginger Botany
Zingiber Officinale roscoe
Classified as an aromatic herb, the part of the ginger plant we most often eat is  called a rhizome, the underground stem of a plant. But with homegrown ginger you can enjoy the stems as well- I chop the stems and enjoy them in tea!
Native to Southeast Asia this plant likes if hot and humid. So if you have a greenhouse you���re a step ahead, but dedicating your warmest space to this plant should get you a happy harvest too. Growing ginger is an 8-10 month project, so we try to get started at the end of January here in Minnesota zone 4. And yes, these plants will be LARGE before they head outside, so plan for space similar to a tomato and they may even have to stay inside longer.
Here���s A Ginger Growing Timeline
Jan 20-Feb 20- Start soaking your rhizomesJan 27- Feb 27 pot up into soil, in a tray to sproutMarch 1-15 pot up again into deeper pots with ample spaceJune 1- 15 Once temps are 65+F outside, you can move to final growing space outdoorsGrowing Ginger You can see the oxygen bubbles (from the added Hydrogen Peroxice) surrounding the rhizomes
You can see the oxygen bubbles (from the added Hydrogen Peroxice) surrounding the rhizomesJust like with growing anything, it makes a difference if you can start with healthy rhizomes. Organic ginger stock is best because you know the rhizomes haven���t been sprayed with any growth inhibitors (another reason to soak the rhizomes before planting), plus if you���ll be growing it organically the plant will have been through a similar growth pattern before. I have yet to buy ginger from a seed company, as I���ve had good luck with organic ginger from my co-op.
Look for firm, dense rhizomes. You can break apart into smaller pieces before soaking, making sure each piece has a bud or two on it. You can heal the ���wounds��� where you broke them apart if you���re going to skip the soaking part.
I start by adding my ginger pieces to a dark container, and soaking in water for a week or two, changing it out every few days. I add a few tablespoons of Hydrogen peroxide to my soaking water to increase the oxygen available to the nodes.

Then, once plumped and possibly sprouting a little more, I���ll plant the rhizomes a few inches deep into some happy, rich well-draining seed starting mix (find my recipe for Seed Starting Mix in my Seed Starting 101 blog) in a seedling tray. I add a mix of worm castings and or sifted compost to the potting mixture to add a boost of nutrients. It usually takes about three weeks to see noticeable buds sprouting on my ginger.
I don���t do anything special for my ginger except keep the soil moist, fertilize like tomatoes, and give them as much extra light and warmth as possible throughout the growing season.
End of SeasonTip: I have brought large plants back inside because of cold spring and fall temperatures. If it���s going to get much below 50F I will bring them back in because the colder temps really seem to affect these guys getting growing again.
Other than that, just make sure they stay warm, ginger���s perfect growing temp is right at 70-75F, and that the soil doesn���t dry out. A little afternoon shade is OK too! This is another reason I love my little greenhouse. I can trap lots of heat in there during the day, (It an often be 90F inside when it only gets up to 60F outside) so even if it dips below 50F overnight, I can keep my ginger happy inside my greenhouse.
If you can, plant them in a location where you can brush the leaves as you walk by, the ginger scent is intoxicating.
Harvesting Ginger Half of last year’s Harvest
Half of last year’s Harvest View of an actual ginger ‘root’ which also smell like ginger!
View of an actual ginger ‘root’ which also smell like ginger!As for harvesting ginger, you���ll wait for one of two signs��� if you���re up north like me, wait until the temperatures are dropping, or you���ll notice they stop taking up as much water and their leaves start to turn yellow (I���ve heard it���s similar to the way garlic starts to dry out). Either way, your ginger has slowed/stopped adding onto to it���s rhizome at that point.
So go ahead and pull apart those big beautiful juicy rhizomes, snip the stems to a few inches above the root (and save for tea if you want), and gently scrub off any remaining dirt.
Preserving GingerI like to keep a few ���roots��� in the refrigerator, and I grate and freeze the majority of the rest. I use a mandolin to grate the roots- so keeping a section of stem on makes it a LOT easier to grate them. It may loose a little flavor by grating versus leaving in larger chunks, but by prepping it all at once I am able to use it more easily.
And I use it almost daily. Ginger goes into my cooking, teas, homemade elderberry syrup, baked goods and ferments ��� like ginger bug soda… My full Blog on making your own sodas from fermented ginger coming soon!

My three pots of ginger produced almost enough to get me through the season, until I started making ginger bug… So, I���m increasing my ginger growing by almost double this coming season. That���s why we garden ��� so we can grow what we love, right!
One of my dreams is to make my own ginger powder from dehydrated ginger someday��� I���ve done that with my homegrown garlic, but haven���t increased my stock enough to attempt that with ginger ��� yet.
Are you growing ginger this season?
Dig In,
Michelle
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January 1, 2023
Homestead Year In Review 2022

I���m finally slowing down enough to take the time to get in that frame of mind where I can rewind and somewhat clearly peer back at 2022, the year in review.
Thankful for 2022
I distinctly remember being so very grateful for the late spring as I was frantically writing/editing/revising so many pages (so many times) along with Stephanie Thurow for our upcoming book, Small-Scale Homesteading.
I felt lucky that the maple sap held off until we got back from our March vacations. We brought home and raised a new brood of chicks into a healthy, happy (and spoiled) backyard flock. I took my local Master Gardener coursework and completed 50+ hours of volunteer hours. I helped grow vegetables and flowers at my son���s elementary school.
 New Additions to the Homestead last Spring
New Additions to the Homestead last SpringWe took time up north in Minnesota to walk through and wonder at creation. I taught classes on companion planting, composting, growing garlic, garden planning and preserving the harvest, wrote for magazines new and old. I got to manage our 6th annual Winter Farmers Markets. My family all got Influenza A at the same time and we nursed each other back to health with homegrown remedies. And I grew as much food as ever- including so many new favorites.
We celebrated life as we lived it. What a year both in and out of the garden!
 Click HERE to watch some fly-over drone footage of the garden from this summer.Weather Woes
Click HERE to watch some fly-over drone footage of the garden from this summer.Weather Woes
And while I can truly say that I���ve never experienced weather like we had last season, I am grateful for all it taught me.
From our early season chill that got everything started late, to May���s thunderstorms, June���s record heat and learning what a Derecho was, hail in September and the Dirty rain that followed���only to have the drought conditions put at ease by way too early and way too much SNOW. Then the artic storms of Christmas. Whew.
And yet, our plants persisted! They grew to the best of their abilities, and hopefully we got to grow with them as we helped them along with low tunnels and shade cloths, deep mulching and frequent watering���
OnwardI���ve become even more enamored with our planet. Not taking for granted the simple act that life exists because of photosynthesis. I���m working towards being part of the solution in taking care of this planet in my small ways. Living as simply as I can, eating local, being smart about my energy consumption- and making those choices with humility, because I know it is a luxury to have a choice.
I believe that each of us doing whatever small things that work for us will be the way we turn the tide and in turn are able to gift a healthy planet to future generations. One of my small parts is growing food for our family and sharing how we do that with you all.
 Garden in Review
Garden in Review
All in all our (roughly) 550 square feet of garden space produced (roughly) 554 pounds of produce (not counting the egg and maple syrup we harvested). Just a few pounds more than last year. Not bad considering that farmers anticipate about 0.5 pounds of produce per square foot.
I���d call that intensive gardening. And it is all made possible by working with nature via taking care of the soil, companion planting, extending our growing seasons, and paying really close attention to what is happening in the gardens.
 One of my Favorite Pics of Bumble Bees from 2022
One of my Favorite Pics of Bumble Bees from 2022From welcoming wildlife big and small, to practicing No Till Gardening, from using what we���ve got with leaf mulch and composting what comes out of our chicken coop- this garden cycle never gets old.

There���s always a way to dive deeper into relationship with Mother Nature, more to learn about tending plants or beneficial insects, another recipe to try that means another new seed to start. I am so grateful I get to do these things ��� I���m blown away by those of you that follow along. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for sharing this journey with me.
I hope I can inspire you in some ways, because I know so many of you have inspired me!
Favorite Blogs from 2022 Beet Love Harvesting, Preserving + Using Herbs Growing Great Garlic (bonus link to webinar) DIY Cocktail InfusingAnd I added so many tasty recipes to the blog as well, From Summer Spaghetti to Broccoli Soup on my newly updated Recipe Page

I am looking forward to seeing many of you at book signings (PS- you can still pre-order the book to get our bonus content HERE), or during the Home and Garden Show days and maybe even at some more in-person classes and events��� more on that soon, for now; cheers to 2023!
Dig In,
Michelle
The post Homestead Year In Review 2022 appeared first on Forks in the Dirt.
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