There certainly have been a lot of gardening posts lately, and with good reason! Of course growing your own food has multiple benefits. But besides the obvious, gardening teaches us what really goes into making our food. We see how a tiny seed can grow into a giant, thriving, fruiting plant, and we see how much water, nutrients, and sunlight are required to support it.
When we cook and consume food we’ve grown, we have a greater appreciation for that food. It’s not just our imagination: homegrown food tastes better. Why? Because it’s fresher, it’s not covered in pesticides, and it hasn’t been sitting around on a truck or in a store, waiting to be purchased.
Growing our own food also makes us makes us more aware of waste. I generally feel a lot worse about letting something I’ve grown from seed spoil. Like I failed it. But letting any food spoil is wasteful and should be avoided at all costs.
Amaranth is an ancient plant that has been cultivated for over 8,000 years These days, amaranth is mainly grown for its edible seeds and leaves. However, this versatile plant has so much more to offer Adding amaranth to your garden can provide multiple benefits, making it a natural solution for various garden problems. In this article, we’ll explore the many advantages of growing amaranth and how it can improve your garden.
An Extremely Hardy and Resilient Plant
One of the best things about amaranth is its hardiness and resilience. This plant can tolerate almost any soil conditions from sandy to clay, acidic to alkaline. It thrives in both full sun and partial shade. Amaranth can handle temperature extremes coping well with heatwaves and light frosts.
Even better, amaranth is highly resistant to most pests and diseases. Bugs and fungi that decimate other plants barely make a dent in amaranth. Its resilience means fewer chemicals in the ecosystem, and its dense foliage provides a living mulch, conserving water and improving soil quality. Biodiversity also gets a boost with amaranth. It’s not picky about its neighbors, allowing you to plant diverse crops together.
Provides Nutritious Food
Amaranth offers very nutritious edible seeds and leaves. The seeds contain 15-16% protein, which is higher than most grains. Amaranth seeds are high in lysine, an essential amino acid lacking in wheat and rice The leaves contain vitamins A, C, K, calcium, iron, and antioxidants
You can add young amaranth leaves to salads or cook them like spinach. The seeds can be used in porridges, bread, cereals, crackers, and bars. Sprouted amaranth seeds make an excellent addition to sandwiches, soups, and salads.
Hardy and Fast-Growing Greens
For a continuous harvest of tasty and nutritious greens, look no further than amaranth. It is one of the fastest growing leafy greens, often ready to start harvesting in just 4-6 weeks from sowing. Amaranth will keep producing greens over many weeks, especially if you continually cut the tender young leaves.
Unlike spinach and lettuce, amaranth is unaffected by hot weather. It thrives during summer, providing a bounty of greens when other leafy plants would bolt or turn bitter. Amaranth leaves retain their flavor and texture in heatwaves.
Low Maintenance and Easy to Grow
Busy gardeners rejoice! Amaranth is one of the easiest plants to grow. It requires minimal care and attention once established.
Direct sow amaranth seeds into prepared soil in spring after the last frost. Keep the soil moist until the seeds germinate in 5-8 days. Amaranth transplants well too. Thin young plants or transplant them 12-18 inches apart. Then sit back and let them grow!
Amaranth thrives on neglect. It doesn’t need fertilizer or compost and tolerates drought extremely well. Rotate amaranth around your vegetable garden to break pest and disease cycles. Amaranth even self-seeds readily, potentially providing years of abundant greens.
Attracts Pollinators
Gardeners looking to attract and support pollinators should consider amaranth. This tall plant produces massive fuzzy flower heads that bees, butterflies, and other pollinating insects adore.
The inflorescences start out green and turn shades of red, purple, or gold when mature. Not only is this burst of color beautiful in the garden, but the nutritious pollen also provides food for pollinators. Plant amaranth along with other pollinator-friendly flowers to create an inviting habitat.
Provides Striking Architectural Interest
With its vibrant foliage and tassel-like flowers, amaranth makes a striking architectural statement in the garden. Some varieties grow 5-7 feet tall, adding drama and height. The lance-shaped leaves come in shades of green, red, and purple. Try mixing colors for maximum impact.
Let amaranth’s vertical form contrast with bushy or trailing plants. Highlight amaranth by underplanting with lower-growing flowers or herbs. The tall plumes also make excellent cut flowers and dry well for seasonal arrangements.
Suppresses Weeds
If weeds are the bane of your garden, use amaranth as a natural weed suppressor. Amaranth forms a dense mat of foliage that stops weed seeds from germinating and blocks sunlight from reaching young weeds.
Simply sow or transplant amaranth thickly where you have issues with weeds. For example, amaranth can be used as a living mulch between rows of vegetables. Or plant it as a ground cover in ornamental beds. The only maintenance required is an occasional trimming.
Improves the Soil
Through a combination of deep roots, dense foliage, and natural allelopathy, amaranth enhances soil health. Its roots penetrate deeply, bringing up nutrients from subsoil layers. When the roots and leaves decompose, they add valuable organic matter to enrich the topsoil.
Certain amaranth species release allelopathic compounds that suppress weed growth while stimulating beneficial microbial activity in the soil. Over time, amaranth can help rehabilitate compacted or depleted soil.
Attracts Beneficial Insects
If you want more ladybugs, lacewings, predatory wasps, and other beneficial insects in your garden, amaranth can help. Several studies have found these good bugs are drawn to amaranth more than other plants.
Predatory insects use amaranth for shelter and as a food source. For example, lacewings eat aphids that are attracted to the nectar in amaranth flowers. Planting amaranth near your vegetables can provide a sanctuary for beneficial insects that will keep pests in check naturally.
Traps Pest Insects
Amaranth appears to lure certain insect pests, keeping them away from nearby crops. Research shows amaranth pulls in leafhoppers, aphids, and other sap-sucking insects that damage vegetables and fruit trees.
Interplant amaranth with your tomatoes, peppers, and other vulnerable crops. The amaranth acts as a decoy plant, diverting pests. Simply dispose of any sections where insects congregate. Using amaranth as a magnet plant is an organic pest control strategy.
Provides Nutritious Forage
Both landscape designers and livestock owners are utilizing amaranth. Ornamental varieties add beauty while the plant also serves as a high-protein forage crop.
Amaranth keeps growing after being grazed or cut, allowing for multiple harvests in one season. Cattle, chickens, pigs, sheep, and other livestock devour the leaves and seeds. As a forage, amaranth is comparable to corn and alfalfa in feed value but requires far less water.
How to Grow Amaranth
Growing amaranth is easy no matter why you want to add it to your garden. Follow these simple tips for success:
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Choose an appropriate variety. Vegetable amaranth for leaves, grain amaranth for seeds, and ornamental amaranth for visual impact.
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Start seeds indoors 4-6 weeks before your last spring frost. Harden off seedlings then transplant outdoors in fertile soil after danger of frost.
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Alternatively, directly sow seeds in prepared soil 1/4-1/2 inch deep after the soil warms. Thin young plants to 12-18 inches apart.
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Water regularly until plants are established. After that, amaranth is quite drought tolerant.
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Fertilize lightly with compost or organic fertilizer if desired but not required. Amaranth thrives in poor soils.
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Cut leafy greens and seed heads frequently to encourage regrowth.
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Pull up plants after frost or self-sown amaranth will likely reappear the following spring.
Conclusion
From an edible dual-purpose grain and green to an architectural ornamental, amaranth has much to offer any garden. This resilient, low-maintenance plant improves soils, helps control pests, and supports pollinators naturally. For an eco-friendly, highly useful addition to your garden, look no further than the mighty amaranth!
So what is amaranth, and why is it so useful in the garden?
Amaranth is a beautiful, edible, lettuce that that has bright, vibrant flowers and leaves that range in colors from green, to purple, to red, and taste similar to spinach.
Both the leaves and seeds are edible. Amaranth grains, are highly nutritious.
According to nutriondata.com, Amaranth grain contains protein, fiber, manganese, magnesium, phosphorus and iron.
One cup (246 grams) of cooked amaranth contains the following nutrients:
- Calories: 251
- Protein: 9.3 grams
- Carbs: 46 grams
- Fat: 5.2 grams
- Manganese: 105% RDI
- Magnesium: 40% RDI
- Phosphorus: 36% RDI
- Iron: 29% RDI
- Selenium: 19% RDI
- Copper: 18% RDI
RDI = Recommended Daily Intake. Also called Recommended Dietary Intake.
Amaranth Leaves are also super nutrient-rich. Interestingly, boiling/steaming the leaves versus eating them raw will give you different nutritional content:
1 cup of boiled/steamed amaranth leaves provides:
- Vitamin C 90% RDI
- Vitamin A 73% RDI
- Manganese 57% RDI and trace amounts of Vitamin K.
Whereas 1 cup of raw amaranth leaves provides:
- Vitamin C 20% RDI
- Vitamin A 16% RDI
- Manganese 12% RDI
but a whopping 399% (319 mcg) of Vitamin K!
So depending on your dietary needs, you might want to consider altering your cooking style! This is surprisingly true for many types of food!
In addition to all the reasons listed above, growing your own amaranth is easy, cost effective, and very beneficial to your garden!
How To Grow Amaranth From Seed To Harvest! You MUST Grow This!
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