Black Country Bugle

How to save seeds from popular veg

Seed detective Adam Alexander tells HANNAH some of his tricks of the trade

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STEPHENSON

ADAM ALEXANDER – aka ‘the seed detective’ – has spent much of his life in search of delicious vegetables from around the world.

On his plot within 3.5 acres in Chepstow, Wales, he grows around 100 varieties of veg – and he dries, saves and gives away the seeds, so others can benefit from the diversity of his collection.

Alexander has now written a book, The Seed Detective, and here are his tips on how to collect seeds from some of our most popular veg...

Peas and beans

“All you need to do is grow your crop and leave a few on the plant, let them ripen and dry,” says Alexander. “If the weather is wet, pick them off when they are nearly dry and starting to shrivel and put them in a dry, airy place like a shed or windowsill, then shell the peas and the beans, put them in an envelope somewhere cool and dry. “Because I am storing seeds often for years and I have so many – nearly 500 varieties at the moment – I’m a great believer in keeping them cold and dry, so everything goes into a jam jar or envelope and then into an airtight plastic box and into the fridge.” Good varieties of runner bean include ‘Czar’ and ‘Achievemen­t’. Alexander also rates the peas ‘Hurst Green Shaft’ and ‘Feltham First’. “The plants which are really easy to save seeds from because they are self-fertile are things like climbing French beans – ‘Delinel’ is a good variety,” he adds.

Tomatoes

“Grow open pollinated varieties. The main seed companies do sell them, but so do smaller seed merchants. Good varieties include ‘Cherokee Purple’ and ‘Harbinger’, a traditiona­l variety,” says Alexander.

“Pick the tomatoes when they are ripe, slice them into halves or quarters, scoop the seeds out, rinse them in a sieve under a cold tap to get rid of the pulp and give them a good wash. You don’t have to be gentle with them.”

“Then spread them out thinly on to a piece of greaseproo­f paper, leave them in a warm, airy environmen­t like a kitchen windowsill, but out of direct sunlight. After two to three days, get a knife and scrape them off the greaseproo­f paper, rub them between your fingers just to separate them, and leave them on the paper for maybe a week or so to get really dry, put them in an envelope, then in a plastic box in a cool place.

“Put the name of the variety on the envelope and the year. Tomato seeds can last for 10 years if they are kept cold and dry.”

Squash and courgette

“When you harvest squash in the autumn, scoop the seeds out and rinse them in a colander under the tap to get rid of the pulp, then put them on greaseproo­f paper and let them dry,” says Alexander. “I really love ‘Turk’s Turban’, which is an old traditiona­l variety, which is beautiful to look at and delicious. ‘Uchiki Kuri’ is an orange round squash is another good one.”

“With courgettes, leave them until they’ve grown really big, like a huge marrow, then cut them off the plant, cut them in half and scoop the seeds out, rinse them under the tap in a colander and then spread them out to dry on greaseproo­f paper in an airy place. You know when they are really dry because when you break the seeds in half, they snap.”

Chillies and peppers

Alexander says: “Saving seeds of chillies and peppers is very easy, but they have to be ripe, not green. Simply scrape the seeds out of the ripe fruit and place them on greaseproo­f paper on a sunny windowsill and within two or three days, they are ready for storage.”

Spinach

“You don’t want to save the seed of spinach, which bolts quickly in the summer, but if you have spinach which has grown through the winter, leave a few plants in the ground, thinning the plants out to a foot apart,” suggests Alexander.

“They are pollinated by wind. Let the plants continue to grow through the summer and the seed will ripen.

“As you get the ripe seedheads, which can grow to about 6ft, bend them over a bag and give them a good shake.”

 ?? ?? The Seed Detective by Adam Alexander is published by Chelsea Green, £18.99
The Seed Detective by Adam Alexander is published by Chelsea Green, £18.99
 ?? ?? Tomato seeds drying on greaseproo­f paper
Tomato seeds drying on greaseproo­f paper
 ?? ?? Courgette seeds
Courgette seeds

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