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Old Mon, Mar-07-16, 10:23
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CallmeAnn CallmeAnn is offline
Senior Member
Posts: 1,728
 
Plan: HFLC/IF
Stats: 218/176/140 Female 5'4"
BF:27%
Progress: 54%
Location: Houston area
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MickiSue
Not only baked goods with preservatives in them.

With produce, it's the opposite. Buy lettuce, especially the bags of "baby" greens at the grocery store, and you'll be lucky if they are still edible when you get them home from the store. At multiple times between the field and your house, they were not refrigerated, and it was probably a long time between the field and the bag. Even worse, between the bag and the store. A couple weeks, at least, usually.

Pick baby greens in your own garden, or even a big pot on your deck, and they'll be in the frig, after a light rinse, within the hour.

They'll last for the two weeks it took the bagged stuff to get to your grocery store, and then some, because you have controlled the environment, the entire way.

Of course, as they taste 100X better than the grocery baby greens, they'll never need to last that 2 weeks.


I am not a gardener, and when I tried it, I failed miserably so I have a few questions. When I see the plants on the nursery shelves in the early spring or fall, they are never anything like leafy greens. Do they grow in hot climates? Where are you located? I am in Houston, TX. Other places get hot in the daytime but the climates that most challenge the more delicate plants (edible AND ornamental) remain hot at night. That's us.
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