Caption
Turnips are a cool-weather root vegetable that germinate in only a few days.
Planting, Growing, and Harvesting Turnips
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Types
Many turnips are grown not for the root itself but for the turnip greens, which can be cooked or used raw in salads. Younger turnip greens will not be as bitter as mature leaves. If you are growing turnips primarily for their greens, almost any turnip variety will do.
For roots, try these …
- ‘Gold Ball’: yellow skin, soft, yellow flesh; harvest at 3 inches in diameter for maximum sweetness (will grow to 4 to 5 inches)
- ‘Just Right’: pure white roots, delicious greens; extremely cold-tolerant; stores well; not recommended for a spring crop, as it tends to bolt early
- ‘Purple Top White Globe’: delectable leaves; great for an extended production of greens; roots have purple shoulders; heirloom
- ‘Golden Globe’: roots with amber skin; firm, crisp, sweet flesh; tasty tops.
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Cooking Notes
If you’re wondering how to cook turnips, you’re not alone. Both the turnip greens and roots are very nutritious. Turnip roots generally should be peeled and sliced before using them. Both turnip roots and turnip greens are usually cooked, though they can be eaten raw if young and tender.
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Hi Barry,
The Purple Top White Globe turnips are extremely hardy and it's recommended to plant the seeds as soon as possible in the spring for an early harvest. You can plant the seeds now and just be careful that the temps. don't get too warm in your "greenhouse" on sunny days.
Hi, Kate: Something like this is usually caused because the turnips were stressed. They were planted too far outside cold enough weather (i.e., it was too warm for them) or something is bothering their roots, like a pest of some sort. Or the soil could be unusually rich (sometimes the case) or poor. Carefully dig up a whole root system like an archaeologist and see if the roots can give you a clue. Then eat 'em up, sure!
Hi, Evelyn, Some possible reasons:
• improper soil pH; it should be 6.0 to 7.5, in fertile organic matter.
• turnips need plentiful, consistent moisture.
• some varieties are grown strictly for their greens and produce poor roots/bulbs. Recommended are Gilfeather, Purple Top White Bloge, and Tokyo Cross.
Hope this helps!
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