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I have a bed where strawberries were planted. They didn't do very well but I think it's because the soil wasn't very well amended. Now that it is, I have to decide whether to plant strawberries again or hot peppers. I would like to perennialize the peppers so that I don't have to replace them each year. With our mild winters, I can easily put a cover over the hoops.
I know the strawberries will do much better but am concerned about their lack of sweetness. I have beautiful plants in a large container with big strawberries, but they are your typical unsweeten flavor that you get everywhere. I guess I just expect them to be very sweet, which they're not.
Mary
I don't know why they aren't sweet. I just get whatever variety the nursery has. I've never tasted a sweet strawberry though.Is the lack of sweetness because of your climate or variety? Try a new variety. Smaller berries are usually sweet. The older varieties were very sweet. Are their heirloom varieties?
@Jared77 with the girls growing older, you will have no free time. Forget that until they leave home... Enjoy them.@thistlebloom have you ever tried roasting your veggies? We do and it makes a big difference. I quarter the tomato, the sweet peppers, onion. Garlic cloves I leave whole, and the jalapeños get cut lengthwise, remove the seeds, and into the roasting pan it goes. Under the broiler on the highest shelf in the oven and let it a good char as it work it's magic.
Then into the sauce pot to cook down with fresh herbs and let it do its thing.
That's what we do.
Next year I'm going to focus on getting my act together. Plant smarter and take advantage of what I have. Do some bush beans so I have beans to can instead of trying to picking enough pole beans. Get my cukes vertical, try some heirloom tomatoes in my aquarium greenhouse, and ultimately be more organized.