Sprouting seeds?

Joined
Oct 30, 2002
Messages
43,067
Location
Great Lakes
Anyone into seed sprouting?

I'm tempted to try it... looks like you just need the right lid and a mason jar.

If you've tried it, what seeds have you had good luck with? Alfalfa? Mung bean? Broccoli? Radish?
 
Anyone into seed sprouting?

I'm tempted to try it... looks like you just need the right lid and a mason jar.

If you've tried it, what seeds have you had good luck with? Alfalfa? Mung bean? Broccoli? Radish?

Very simple.

We use these lids;

https://www.masontops.com/collections/all/products/bean-screen-bean-sprouting-lids-for-mason-jars

We usually use a couple different blends.

Broccoli brassica blend broccoli, clover, radish, mustard, arugula.

Sandwich Booster mix of clover, alfalfa, radish, and mustard.
 
Anyone into seed sprouting?

I'm tempted to try it... looks like you just need the right lid and a mason jar.

If you've tried it, what seeds have you had good luck with? Alfalfa? Mung bean? Broccoli? Radish?
My wife Loves to dig around in the dirt, a trait she acquired as a child from her grandmother. Some pics of her sunflower seedlings that she harvested from last year’s flowers and other seedlings she has going on for this year’s ‘ crop’.

IMG_1963.webp


IMG_1964.webp


IMG_1965.webp
 
I'm not much of a gardener myself, but I feel like its something kids should all experience. I planted a 25x45 garden this year with the random stuff they wanted seed wise. Cushaw and yellow squash, water melons, cucumbers, broccoli, pink-eyed purple hull peas and sunflowers have already come up. Jury is still out on the bell pepper/lavender seeds we planted. I didn't start anything early just straight seed in the garden. They're enjoying watching the progress. I even put up a fishing line fence to try to keep the deer out.
 
I always put seeds in a cup of water. Once they sprout I transfer them into small pots. Unless they're tiny seeds like tobacco. Those get sprinkled onto a tray of soil, then transferred to pots once the nursery leaves appear. Tweezers are involved.

I save the flowers trays from the nursery for this task.
 
I've done broccoli quite a bit. I tend to consume the sprouts by first freezing them, then adding a small handful to a smoothie.

I've sprouted them using a mason jar and a perforated lid. The biggest issues I've run into are:

1) My wife complaining about the sulfurous smell
2) Forgetting about them because I hid them in a rarely used cupboard (see point 1)

Leaving them without at least 2x/day rinsing, or letting them stay soggy due to less than perfect drainage after a rinsing cycle will cause them to stink/rot/fail.

They grow the most aggressively when kept in the dark. Once the size/volume of the sprouts is almost where I want it, I let them sit on a counter so they can catch indirect sunlight, causing them to green up.
 
Back
Top Bottom