
Park Seed Basil Herb Plant Seeds, Easy to Grow, Variety of Colors, Spring Garden, Romanesco, Pack of 100
- Days to Maturity: 70 from direct sow. Here it is, the variety that tops everyone's list of flavorful, wildly fragrant basils. Romanesco is a sweet basil with large leaves (and plenty of 'em, thanks to excellent branching on big plants) and a higher oil content than others. More oil means more aroma and richer flavor. And you will smell the difference even before you taste it.
- Romanesco is a must-have for any chef's garden, and it should not be confined to the herb garden by any means. Fragrance this strong is fabulous to deter pests in the veggie patch, and makes a fine companion to scentless flowering annuals from zinnia to petunia.
- Romanesco reaches 32 inches high and about 24 inches wide. The exceptionally long leaves are packed with flavor on very well-branched plants that give you generous yields all season. Harvest Romanesco leaf-by-leaf or simply cut back the whole plant for drying or freezing.
- Basil is easy to grow. Begin the seeds either indoors in late winter or direct-sow in spring. To start indoors, sow about 6 to 8 weeks before last scheduled frost. The seeds will germinate in 5 to 10 days. Transplant when they have 2 sets of true leaves, spacing the plants 18 to 24 inches apart in the garden, or individually in containers
- As your basil plants grow, pinch off the central stem when they are about 6 weeks old, and prune back each stem when it has more than 8 sets of leaves. (Cut it back to the first or second set of leaves, harvesting the rest.) If you keep your plants well pinched and pruned, you should be able to harvest up to half a cup of fresh leaves every week during the growing season.
- Days to Maturity: 70 from direct sow. Here it is, the variety that tops everyone's list of flavorful, wildly fragrant basils. Romanesco is a sweet basil with large leaves (and plenty of 'em, thanks to excellent branching on big plants) and a higher oil content than others. More oil means more aroma and richer flavor. And you will smell the difference even before you taste it.
- Romanesco is a must-have for any chef's garden, and it should not be confined to the herb garden by any means. Fragrance this strong is fabulous to deter pests in the veggie patch, and makes a fine companion to scentless flowering annuals from zinnia to petunia.
- Romanesco reaches 32 inches high and about 24 inches wide. The exceptionally long leaves are packed with flavor on very well-branched plants that give you generous yields all season. Harvest Romanesco leaf-by-leaf or simply cut back the whole plant for drying or freezing.
- Basil is easy to grow. Begin the seeds either indoors in late winter or direct-sow in spring. To start indoors, sow about 6 to 8 weeks before last scheduled frost. The seeds will germinate in 5 to 10 days. Transplant when they have 2 sets of true leaves, spacing the plants 18 to 24 inches apart in the garden, or individually in containers
- As your basil plants grow, pinch off the central stem when they are about 6 weeks old, and prune back each stem when it has more than 8 sets of leaves. (Cut it back to the first or second set of leaves, harvesting the rest.) If you keep your plants well pinched and pruned, you should be able to harvest up to half a cup of fresh leaves every week during the growing season.
Description
- Days to Maturity: 70 from direct sow. Here it is, the variety that tops everyone's list of flavorful, wildly fragrant basils. Romanesco is a sweet basil with large leaves (and plenty of 'em, thanks to excellent branching on big plants) and a higher oil content than others. More oil means more aroma and richer flavor. And you will smell the difference even before you taste it.
- Romanesco is a must-have for any chef's garden, and it should not be confined to the herb garden by any means. Fragrance this strong is fabulous to deter pests in the veggie patch, and makes a fine companion to scentless flowering annuals from zinnia to petunia.
- Romanesco reaches 32 inches high and about 24 inches wide. The exceptionally long leaves are packed with flavor on very well-branched plants that give you generous yields all season. Harvest Romanesco leaf-by-leaf or simply cut back the whole plant for drying or freezing.
- Basil is easy to grow. Begin the seeds either indoors in late winter or direct-sow in spring. To start indoors, sow about 6 to 8 weeks before last scheduled frost. The seeds will germinate in 5 to 10 days. Transplant when they have 2 sets of true leaves, spacing the plants 18 to 24 inches apart in the garden, or individually in containers
- As your basil plants grow, pinch off the central stem when they are about 6 weeks old, and prune back each stem when it has more than 8 sets of leaves. (Cut it back to the first or second set of leaves, harvesting the rest.) If you keep your plants well pinched and pruned, you should be able to harvest up to half a cup of fresh leaves every week during the growing season.














