Gardening: Flowers

The Edible Flower Garden


Edible Flower Garden (Edible Garden Series)
Review from Amazon.com

"Author Rosalind Creasy has written extensively on edible gardens: The Edible Herb Garden and The Edible French Garden are some of her past titles. The Edible Flower Garden focuses on plants that not only enhance recipes, but also turn the plate into a painting--a visual as well as gastronomic enterprise. For the reader who thinks such things are only for true gourmets or Metropolitan Home magazine aesthetes, one look at the photographs in this book will seduce you. The images are so beautiful and unusual as to be hypnotic: rose petals served as a bowl of ice cream (Rose Petal Sorbet); salads that look like wildflower meadows.

The Edible Flower Garden

    Edible Flower Garden (Edible Garden Series)

    This is a great vehicle for showing off your garden, so include unusual greens like orach, ornamental cabbages, and violet leaves, as well as herbs like chervil and borage. Choose edible flowers in the pink, blue, and white range for a garnish.

    Classic tea sandwiches are filled with watercress and cream cheese. Blue violas and white watercress blossoms are tucked into the sandwiches and used to garnish the plate.

    This garden is in full swing with exuberant violas and nasturtiums, growing in among each other, as with chives, pansies, and calendulas.


Creasy interviews Alice Waters of Chez Panisse about her use of flowers in meals at her famous Berkeley restaurant; Waters recounts the curious effect cooking with flowers has on diners. "The flowers are a fascination. People really focus on them and are curious." This curiosity stems from a cluster of superstitions: that all flowers are somehow poisonous, that beautiful things should not be touched or consumed, that vegetables are the sturdy, useful plants while flowers are "for show." Reading The Edible Flower Garden, I remembered the summer I forgot to pick my artichokes, and they basked in the sun long after they were ripe. One day I looked out and it was as if a spell had been cast: the ugly green artichoke scales were gone, transformed into blinding purple flowers. Color is always hiding somewhere, and it is wonderful to allow it to flourish, like Creasy does, in places where it is not expected."
--Emily White, Amazon.com

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