Chapter One

We Believe the Best Meals
Start in the Dirt.

This is a journal about the in-between hours — the Tuesday evening you pull a turnip that wasn't quite ready, the Sunday morning the courgette plant finally gives up its first awkward fruit. We write about the meals that follow. We write about the dirt that came first.

Whether you tend a window box or half an acre — pull up a chair. You belong here.

Free to join · No pitch · Just growing

We believe in crooked carrots.

The ones that forked around a pebble. The ones your grocery store would never stock. The ones that taste exactly like September.

Rows of heritage carrots freshly pulled from dark garden soil, roots still damp

October carrots, allotment plot 14

Priya S., Manchester

The parsnip that forked around the stone we never found. We ate it anyway. It tasted like the whole autumn.

— Tom H., Edinburgh

Close-up of heritage tomatoes in varied sizes on a wooden cutting board

Cherokee Purple, first harvest

Amara D., Bristol

2025

Cosmic Purple Carrot

Daucus carota

Sow March–June. Thin to 5cm. Tastes of pepper + sweetness.

Hands holding a bunch of mixed coloured beets freshly washed under outdoor tap

Chioggia + Golden beets, mid-August

Ruth O., Dublin

Small child crouching in garden soil inspecting a newly sprouted seedling

Milo, age 3, first radish

Jen & Karl, Leeds

more garlic next year

pencilled in the margin, page 34

Balcony herb garden with terracotta pots containing basil, thyme and rosemary

Balcony pots, July flush

Selin A., London

We believe dinner should smell like the afternoon.

Tomatoes warm from the vine. Basil bruised by your thumbnail. Garlic pulled this morning, still papery and sweet. Time is a flavour.

Wooden kitchen table with freshly harvested tomatoes, basil and a knife beside a bowl

Sauce day, late August

Nadia F., Glasgow

Roasted Parsnip & Hazelnut Soup

55 minserves 4

Roast until the edges blacken. That's the flavour. Don't be cautious.

Fresh zucchini on a flour dusted cutting board beside a chef's knife that has halved it

First zucchini of June, halved

David M., Cork

Hands pressing fresh pasta dough on a linen dusted surface beside garden herbs

Pasta + garden sage

Lucia T., Brighton

Dinner smelled like the afternoon. Like warm tomato skin and cut grass. We ate outside until it was too dark to see.

— August journal, Beatrice K.

Jar of homemade pesto with basil leaves scattered on a wooden surface with pine nuts

Balcony basil pesto, batch two

Hamid N., Birmingham

Zucchini Fritters with Garden Herbs

25 minserves 2

Grate, salt, squeeze hard. Then squeeze again. The dryness is everything.

We believe soil is a recipe ingredient.

You can taste the compost in October parsnips. You can taste the drought in small sweet strawberries. The earth writes the first draft of every meal.

2025

Red Russian Kale

Brassica napus

Direct sow July–Aug. Frost improves flavour. Pick outer leaves.

Handwritten seed packet labels in pencil laid out on a wooden potting bench

This year's seed tin

Rosalind C., York

The soil here is clay. We spent three years breaking it. Now it grows the best beets in the village. That's not bragging. That's just time.

— Geoff & Margery, Shropshire

Small terracotta seedling pots with hand-written plant labels on a greenhouse shelf

March starts, heated propagator

Fiona B., Edinburgh

2025

Mortgage Lifter Tomato

Solanum lycopersicum

Start Feb indoors. Stake early. One plant feeds a family.

Close up of soil being turned with a hand trowel revealing dark rich compost beneath

Year three compost, finally ready

Olu A., Coventry

Heritage Beet & Goat's Cheese Tart

70 minserves 6

The beets bleed into the pastry. Let them. The purple is part of the recipe.

2025

Purple Vienna Kohlrabi

Brassica oleracea

Sow April–July. Harvest at golf-ball size. Don't wait.

4,200+

Members growing

from balcony to half-acre

38

Countries represented

same dirt, different latitude

Free

Always will be

no pitch. just growing.

I joined because of the parsnip post. I stayed because everyone here talks about failure as readily as they talk about harvest. That's rare.

SL

Sylvia L.

Retired teacher · Yorkshire heritage beds

PK
TO
AM
RH
GF
+4k

growing alongside you

Start Growing With Us

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  • Balcony Growers
  • Heritage Varieties
  • Seed Savers
  • Kitchen Gardeners
  • Raised Bed Builders
  • Compost Makers
  • First-Time Growers
  • Children's Gardens
  • Window Box Tenders
  • Allotment Holders
  • Patio Potters
  • Fermenters & Preservers
  • Balcony Growers
  • Heritage Varieties
  • Seed Savers
  • Kitchen Gardeners
  • Raised Bed Builders
  • Compost Makers
  • First-Time Growers
  • Children's Gardens
  • Window Box Tenders
  • Allotment Holders
  • Patio Potters
  • Fermenters & Preservers