The King of the Blues variety is a great-tasting runner bean. Photo / Heritage Food Crops Research Trust
The King of the Blues variety is a great-tasting runner bean. Photo / Heritage Food Crops Research Trust
Kem Ormond is a features writer for The Country. She’s also a keen gardener. This week, she’s writing about the versatility of heritage beans.
Whether dried beans, runner beans, plump green dwarf beans, broad beans, or butter beans, they’re all delicious, either steamed, boiled, bottled, pickled or tossed through asalad.
Beans are among the easiest and most rewarding crops to grow, and now is the right time to get them in the ground.
At the Heritage Food Crops Research Trust in Whanganui, they maintain a collection of 108 bean varieties.
Incredibly, if you send them a stamped, self-addressed envelope, they’ll send you a selection of heritage bean seeds for free.