Stop Buying These 9 Veggies And Start Growing Them For Free Instead

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The produce section is designed to be a recurring subscription service: you buy the vegetable, eat it, and return next week to pay for it again. However, many common vegetables are biologically programmed to regenerate, meaning the“waste” you throw in the compost bin is actually a free seed starter. By placing the root ends or scraps of these nine vegetables in water or soil, you can break the cycle of payment and harvest fresh produce from your windowsill indefinitely. It is the ultimate act of defiance against grocery inflation.
1. Green Onions (Scallions)This is the“gateway drug” of kitchen gardening. When you slice green onions, leave about an inch of the white root end intact. Place them in a small glass with an inch of water. Within days, new green shoots will rocket upward. You can harvest the same onion three or four times before the root exhausts itself.
2. CeleryDon't toss the thick, woody base of the celery bunch. Place it in a shallow bowl of warm water in a sunny spot. In a week, yellow leaves will sprout from the center, followed by small stalks. Once established, plant it in soil, and you will grow a fresh (albeit stronger-tasting) stalk of celery.
3. Romaine LettuceSimilar to celery, the heart of a Romaine head can regenerate. Place the stump in an inch of water. New leaves will sprout from the center within days. While you won't get a giant full head, you will get enough fresh, crunchy leaves for a sandwich or side salad every few weeks.
4. Garlic GreensIf a clove of garlic sits too long and sprouts a green shoot, don't throw it away. Plant the clove in a small pot of soil. It will grow long, chive-like greens that have a mild garlic flavor. Snip them for garnishes or salads; they taste fresher than any dried herb.
5. Ginger Root
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Ginger is a rhizome that spreads underground. If you have a piece of ginger with“eyes” (small bumps), plant it shallowly in potting soil. It takes months, but it will eventually grow into a stunning houseplant that produces fresh, young ginger roots beneath the soil.
6. PotatoesPotatoes that have sprouted“eyes” in the pantry are essentially seeds. Cut the potato into chunks (ensuring each chunk has an eye) and let them dry overnight. Plant them deep in a bucket or garden bag. One old potato can yield five pounds of new potatoes by the end of the season.
7. BasilFresh basil is expensive and wilts quickly. Save a four-inch stem from your packet, strip the lower leaves, and place it in water. It will grow roots in a week. Transplant it to a pot, and you will have a perpetual basil bush that saves you three dollars every time you crave pesto.
8. Carrot GreensYou cannot regrow the orange taproot, but you can regrow the nutritious greens. Place the orange“top” cut side down in water. Feathery green tops will sprout quickly. These greens taste like parsley and are excellent in pesto or as a chimichurri base.
9. Bok ChoyLike celery and lettuce, Bok Choy regenerates from the base. Place the cut stump in water, and watch it push out new leaves. It is a hardy grower and can be transplanted to soil for a larger harvest.
Farming Your WindowsillRegrowing scraps changes your relationship with food. You stop seeing a celery stump as trash and start seeing it as an asset. With zero investment other than tap water and a little soil, you can generate a recurring dividend of fresh vitamins right in your own kitchen.
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