Find » Lifestyle » Food & Wine » Organic Gardening: Growing Vegetabl...

Organic Gardening: Growing Vegetable Spaghetti

By Kerry, published Apr 10, 2008
Published Content: 154  Total Views: 25,748  Favorited By: 77 CPs
Embed:  
Rating: 4.6 of 5
Organic gardening tips will provide you with many new ideas for planting your spring fruit and vegetable seedlings. But, did you realize that growing your own spaghetti is fun and easy, provides a low-carb meal and is great for those who are dieting? As crazy as this sounds, there is a vegetable that we have grown every year that provides a healthy and very tasty bowl of spaghetti, without all of those carbohydrates.

It's the vegetable spaghetti.

This curious vegetable grows just like a pumpkin vine, in a sunny place with soil which is a little acidic. It will sprawl out along the ground and can also be grown along a trellis. The vegetable itself can grow to around 4 to 5 lbs, and will need to be supported with netting or old pantyhose to prevent the vine from splitting. There is also a smaller squash variety which is harvested in Autumn, although I find the spring summer variety to be much more resilient.

Growing vegetable spaghetti:

Plant them at the end of winter after the last frost. They may be planted sooner if protection from extremes is available, such as a heavy plastic hood for overnight. As usual I recommend a bed mostly of manure, horse manure is best. Your plants will grow vigorously and you will need to plant the seeds 2 per mound at 3 to 4 feet apart to allow them plenty of room. If you are in a more confined area when gardening, growing these on a trellis along the fence would be best. They can then be planted 2 feet apart and 1 seed per hole. Secure them to the trellis using some fabric so the vines are not constricted as they grow thicker and heavier.

Any vines like pumpkins, squash, watermelons and cucumbers can easily die from being over watered. As tempting as it may be when you see leaves beginning to wilt, do not water them until they are very heavily wilted, even in the heat of summer. Watering them in the evening is best too since the vegetables when wet, will attract sunburn spots and it is here they will become soft and begin to rot. Ideally, they only need about an inch of water each week to thrive.

Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 15 of 29
Next >>
 
Very interesting. I had never even heard of this plant until now. Thanks for sharing

Posted on 04/21/2008 at 11:04:38 PM

 
:-)

Posted on 04/15/2008 at 1:04:40 PM

 
Excellent!

Posted on 04/14/2008 at 9:04:05 AM

 
:-)

Posted on 04/13/2008 at 5:04:13 PM

 
This is a new dish for me. It sounds very interesting. I'll have to give it a try...thanks!

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 7:04:38 PM

 
Kerry - Thanks, learned something new :)

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 7:04:30 PM

 
jcorn, there are different varieties. These are larger than the ones which are labelled as squash.

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 5:04:31 PM

 
Very interesting article.

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 4:04:35 PM

 
Is this the same as spaghetti squash?

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 4:04:05 PM

 
Vegetable spaghetti. I learned something new. Thanks to you.

Posted on 04/12/2008 at 3:04:36 PM

 
very nice ideas, good article.

Posted on 04/11/2008 at 9:04:47 PM

 
oooh I'll have to send this to my parents!

Posted on 04/11/2008 at 8:04:15 PM

 
oooh I'll have to send this to my parents!

Posted on 04/11/2008 at 8:04:41 PM

 
I haven't heard of vegetable spaghetti either, thanks for the article! :)

Posted on 04/11/2008 at 2:04:17 PM

 
sounds so interesting and great

Posted on 04/11/2008 at 8:04:58 AM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comments 1 - 15 of 29
Next >>
Most Commented On