All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

Look For All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook at Amazon

Organic vegetable gardening means that you will not be spraying toxic chemicals on your fresh food, and you won’t be disseminating chemical fertilizers on the ground. If you don’t do that, how do you keep your garden from getting a bug feast or prevent sparse, low quality crops?

Companion planting is the solution. Companion planting may be described as growing two or more dissimilar kinds of plants close together so that numerous gain is derived, like repelling pests, attracting beneficial insects, adding necessitated nutrients to the soil, or supplying shelter

Some plants give off scents or chemicals that repel insects, insects like worms and beetles that may destruct your garden. Other plants support prevent sickness or attract insects, which are beneficial to plants. And galore plants are particular at breaking down the soil and helping other plants absorb critical nutrients. Essentially associate planting is employed to support your core plants thrive without chemicals.

An example would be planting corn and beans together. Corn removes nitrogen from then soil while growing. Beans fix nitrogen back into the soil while growing and support the corn

I’ll provide a warning though to persons who would plant beans in with their corn. Bean varieties include pole beans (climbing beans) and bush beans (non-climbing beans). Do NOT plant pole beans in with your corn. The climbing beans will invent a twisted and leafy jungle around your corn plants, making it difficult to harvest the corn.

Companion Planting Suggestions

Marigolds have a very strong fragrance. Many insects find marigolds rather distasteful including nematodes (roundworms), whiteflies, beetles, and aphids. To use marigolds as a associate plant, plant them at the perimeter of your square foot garden box. Take care to not plant them too closely to your vegetables because they do attract spider mites and slugs.

Nasturtiums or wormwood are good when planted close to the cabbage family as they attract the white cabbage moth away from the plants. Nasturtiums are also very helpful when planting broccoli

If you’re growing tomatoes, geraniums repel cabbage worms, Japanese beetles, and leafhoppers. If you’re planting corn, grapes, peppers or cabbage, geraniums are also beneficial.

If you intend to grow tomatoes, planting garlic with them is a good idea. Planting them with carrots is a bad idea because the tomatoes will stunt the growth of the carrots. Avoid planting dill and kohlrabi near tomatoes, because they slow tomato growth.

Horseradish is good with potatoes.

Parsley is good with tomatoes.

Santolina is a good insect repellent, particularly for spinach and lettuce.

Thyme is a good protective border for the vegetable garden and repels fruit moths.

Keep ants away? Catnip, Mint, Onion, Peppermint, Spearmint, Tansy, Wormwood.

Slug repellent? Artemisia, Fennel, Garlic, Rosemary, Sage (Fennel is destructive to most plants particularly beans, cucumbers and tomatoes)

When you don’t want flypaper in your garden – Basil, Pennyroyal, Rue, Tansy (also repels Aphids and greenfly)

Don’t Forget The Bees

You need bees and other pollinating insects if you are:

  • planting tomatoes
  • planting potatoes
  • planting beans
  • planting pumpkins

Bees are attracted by most flowers because they gather nectar to make honey and pollen to feed to the larvae. Going from flower to flower to gather as much as they may before going back to the hive, they take pollen from one plant to the next and aid with plant fertilization as they go. Flowering plants are important in a vegetable patch. Some of the best include: allysium, red clover, Queen Anne’s lace, cosmos, coriander, parsley flowers, dill, little daisies and lucerne.

Happy eating!


All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

The best-selling gardening book author, Mel Bartholomew, offers more than 135 recipes to get enjoyment from the harvest from your square foot garden. The featured fresh fruits and vegetables offer healthy, cost effective and chemical free addititions to each meal. Mel adds harvesting proficiencies and yield info for each of the seventeen vegetables, fruits, and herbs and adds penny pinching tips, square foot advice, and even a kid’s gardening corner all around the book. Full color photographs illustrate the fruits, vegetables and healthful meals all around the book.
About the Author
Bestselling author, Mel Bartholomew was an engineer by profession and a garden caretaker by weekend. Using his engineering expertise, he devised a system that yields 100% of the harvest in 20% of the space. Mel’s method gained popularity and at last he converted millions of gardeners world-wide to his Square Foot method. The Square Foot Gardening titles have sold more than 2 million copies.

Most helpful customer reviews

23 of 23 people found the following review helpful.
5Packed with extra info
By Marsha Garner
I received an All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook for Christmas.
This is NOT “just another cookbook”.
It is packed with extra info like when to harvest, signs that it is ready, how to harvest and tips for storage.
The pages for Planting Schedule for Continuous Harvest Crops and Plant Spacing contain the extra help I need.
I am not a big fan of eggplant but I can see myself trying these recipies. I may find a new favorite veggie!
I think this “cookbook” will encourage more people to start a garden and take their harvest to the family table.
Marsha Garner
Kyle, Tx.

15 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
5Surprisingly wonderful little book!
By K. Moody
I usually pick up a few magazines and books to read while I am in Lowes to stave off the boredom while DH looks at everything hardware and power toolwise. Today I happened to pick up this book. I was intrigued as I had read the Square Foot Gardener book. I had never implemented anything in the book mind you, but it was still an enjoyable read. I figured that anyone who is that awesome a gardener must have some awesome fresh recipes. I was definitely not disappointed!

15 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
5the only gardening book you will ever need (unless he writes a sequel)
By Michael R. Perkins
First of all this book could not have been written by anybody but an engineer. The author, a retired engineer, debunks common gardening myths and provides a way to make garden practical instead of a chore and perhaps even fun. This is a how-to book that delivers and that is rare. Are you interested in being a successful gardener and doing it efficiently? Read this book and follow his method. It works.

See all 10 customer reviews…

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook Pic

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook Picture

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook Image

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook Photo

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook Pic

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook

All New Square Foot Gardening Cookbook Pic