Dahlia
Deeply Rooted
I just learned a little about this cool plant and I want to try growing it! Has anyone ever tried growing these? Another name for them is "sun chokes." I read they are like potatoes, but more nutritious.
I've never grown them. A few years back my wife asked me to grow them, but comments like this on this forum decided me to not try them. I've also read about how invasive mint can be but I grew mint. I had a place next to a workshop and enclosed by a sidewalk where it could easily be contained. It was no problem at all.VERY invasive. If grown in a vegetable garden, it is virtually impossible to harvest every single tuber, and they will come up the next year as weeds. At present, they permanently occupy a distant corner of my property.
That must make the task of mowing more pleasant. More pleasant then having wild onions in the lawn.heh, mints, we've had some mints escape even across 30ft of crushed rinsed limestone. the seeds probably were washed around. we now have at least three mint patches out in various grassy areas that we just mow through all the time. i've not gone after them to weed them out. there's also some thymes that have escaped too.
I have read this before but it doesn't match my experience. I once saved some sunchoke tubers in a bag in the fridge over the winter so that I could plant them the next year. I missed my window of opportunity, however and at the 18 month mark decided it was too late to plant them. On inspection, to my surprise, they were as nice as I remember them being fresh out of the ground. I sliced and ate some raw and cooked the rest. I couldn't distinguish any degradation in texture or flavor.The tubers don't keep well, so best left in the ground until needed.
I have grown Sunchokes and enjoyed it quite a bit. They do tend to get pretty tall and eventually will develop something like a small sunflower. They are part of the sunflower (Helianthus) family but unlike our cultivated sunflowers (Helianthus annuus) they are native to North America. They are not supposed to cross with the annuus species.
I can attest that they will spread but in my experience it was totally manageable - better than my mint experience. I grew them along a fence in town and later wondered if my neighbor ended up fighting them back on his side of the fence.