[Image description: the very first growth from a Lindera benzoin seed has just emerged]

Here’s a shot of one of the hundreds of seeds I transplanted yesterday. Lindera benzoin is also known as spicebush and is a critical plant for the spicebush swallowtail butterfly

We had them cold stratifying (a process that involves storing at low temperatures to overcome seed dormancy) in a five gallon bucket in a roughly 3 foot/ 1 meter pile of wood chips from the drop we had last year. They were stored in a substrate of aged wood chips, compost, rabbit droppings, and biochar we had soaked in our duck pond by using a recycled onion sack.

They were removed from the bucket and transferred to an air prune box, where we’ll grow them for a year before planting a good portion of them on the property and (fingers crossed) sell the rest to pay for my plant addiction.

  • Edit to show how cool the spicebush swallowtail is
  • @LallyLuckFarm@beehaw.orgOPM
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    27 months ago

    Would you be willing to share how you like to use them? I’m planning to give some to family and would like to have a few things they can do with them

    • Remy Rose
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      27 months ago

      Sure! I mostly grind dried parts of them into spice mixes, i.e. seeds, bark, leaves. It’s got kind of a peppery, citrussy, piney flavor. I like it in pancakes, yogurt, curry, tea… lotsa stuff.

      • @LallyLuckFarm@beehaw.orgOPM
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        27 months ago

        Rad, thank you! Most of what I’ve seen elsewhere has focused on using the berries so knowing that the other parts can be used as well is awesome

        • Remy Rose
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          27 months ago

          Oh yeah! And what’s even more fun, each part has a slightly different flavor. Even the berries taste different green vs red, with vs without seed, etc. It’s really versatile.