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Blue Lake Bush Green Bean
From home(l)y to gourmet.
Garden Pack
Eligible for Membership Deal
Sorry, this item is either sold out or unavailable from wholesalers. Hopefully we'll have it in stock for 2011!
Blue Lake Beans, both the bush and pole varieties, were originally tough skinned canning beans for wild west homesteads. Today, after years of breeding and PR, Blue Lake is one of the most widely grown and loved stringless string beans. The plant's prolific, round green bean pods are easy to grow and have a consistently crisp texture and mild flavor. If you prefer a beanier tasting bush bean, try our Black Valentines.
50 seeds per pack.
How to Grow Blue Lake Bush Green Bean

Beans are fun, fast-growing plants that take little care to perform well.

It makes sense to inoculate beans before sowing, which boosts the nitrogen levels of your garden soil with no work whatsoever. Inoculant is available at garden centers or from the catalogs of larger seed companies (hopefully we'll have supplies for sale next year!).

Sow bean seeds about three or four inches apart in the row around the third week of May. Thinning is not necessary, but do keep the plants weeded, especially when young. Bush beans begin to bear in about 50 days, and their crop is produced in one brief burst lasting about two weeks; to have a steady crop, plant additional beans every two or three weeks for the first half of the season. Pole beans such as Scarlet Runner bear for a longer period, often continuing to set pods until frost.

For most tender green beans, harvest when young, slightly thicker than a pencil. Our favorite way to prepare these is to pan-fry them with strong curry or Cajun seasonings. To harvest dry beans, let the plant mature; pods will dry on the plant towards the end of summer. Pull the plants up by the roots and allow to air dry under cover if prolonged wet or cold weather sets in early. Once fully dry, shake plants back and forth within a plastic garbage can; the beans will release from their pods and settle in the bottom of the pail. To cook, soak at least six hours and then boil until tender.

(Date suggestions reflect our early- to mid-May last frost date here in the Hudson Valley)
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