flowerbug
Garden Master
@HmooseK I'm still around, thanks for asking, just haven't had much to contribute. The heat has me knackered.
Annette
glad you said hi back though.
@HmooseK I'm still around, thanks for asking, just haven't had much to contribute. The heat has me knackered.
Annette
Last night I found some paper dry pods on the Grandma Rivera pole lima's and figured I'd take a look inside. These plants have been super productive and I'm sure I'll be able to make my seed return and then some.
Having never grown Lima beans before, I realized I had no idea how to prepare them for eating. Anyone have any thoughts on this with the larger variety? In thinking about it, I think I've only ever had baby lima beans from a store. Do you just soak them and cook them like normal dried beans?
I look forward to your advice!
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Most frequently, I use limas in the shelly (green-shelled) stage. I prefer them just before the pods dry, when the pod becomes limp where it connects to the stem. They pass through this stage very quickly, so I pick every 2-3 days when the pods begin ripening. For the most part, I blanch them (4 minutes for large beans & limas) and freeze them; that process seems to soften the skins. I freeze a lot this way, but also allow some to get dry for seed, and to share seed with others....
Having never grown Lima beans before, I realized I had no idea how to prepare them for eating. Anyone have any thoughts on this with the larger variety? In thinking about it, I think I've only ever had baby lima beans from a store. Do you just soak them and cook them like normal dried beans?
I look forward to your advice!
Most frequently, I use limas in the shelly (green-shelled) stage. I prefer them just before the pods dry, when the pod becomes limp where it connects to the stem. They pass through this stage very quickly, so I pick every 2-3 days when the pods begin ripening. For the most part, I blanch them (4 minutes for large beans & limas) and freeze them; that process seems to soften the skins. I freeze a lot this way, but also allow some to get dry for seed, and to share seed with others.
You can also just soak & cook dry limas like any other dry bean, although IMO you lose much of their flavor that way. Fresh green-shelled beans (including limas) are one of the best joys you can experience as a home gardener.
Just had some frozen limas last night, mixed with home-grown cut sweet corn, to make succotash.... my favorite way to eat limas.![]()
Fresh, as in raw???i think they are divine too. so good. they have a hint of what i think of as a maple flavor when i eat them fresh and green right there in the garden. it's so good.