Learn how to grow asparagus from crowns or seed
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Types
Asparagus plants are either male or female. Female plants produce berries; males plants do not expend energy on berries so they can be up to three times more productive than female plants. For this reason, growing male asparagus plants is often preferred.
- Gardeners in Zones 4 to 6 have a wider selection of varieties, including ‘Jersey Giant’, ‘Jersey King’, and ‘Jersey Knight’. Older varieties ‘Mary Washington’ and ‘Martha Washington’ may produce female plants, which are not as productive as the males.
- In colder climates, ‘Guelph Millennium’ and other varieties that emerge late often escape damage from spring freezes.
- In warmer climates, early and heat-tolerant varieties such as ‘Apollo’ and ‘UC-157’ produce well before the weather turns hot.
White asparagus is not a variety, but simply asparagus grown in the absence of sunlight to prevent chlorophyll from developing. White asparagus is slightly sweeter but has less fiber than green asparagus.
Purple asparagus is bred to be purple in color but turns green when it is cooked. Purple varieties tend to have thicker spears, but fewer of them. ‘Purple Passion’ is tasty but is not an all-male variety.

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Cooking Notes
A simple and easy favorite when it comes to asparagus is asparagus soup.
Opinions vary on when to attack the weeds: in fall, after the first hard frost (or maybe after a couple of frosts, depending on how hard one frost might be). Or in early spring, before the weeds get going.
In digging and pulling the weeds, remember that the asparagus crown is probably 6 to 8 inches below the surface and, after so long in the ground, it has probably expanded in overall size. Use a hoe or other such tool to dig without piercing or breaking the asparagus crown. You could do this both in spring and fall, considering how overgrown it may be after so long.
When you have the bed as weed free as possible, apply 3 to 4 inches of organic mulch—wood chips, compost, or clean straw. It will help to minimize weeds.
Several sources mention using salt, diluted in water as a traditional remedy for weeds in asparagus, but we do not recommend it.
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