Plus,Grumpys love for collard greens.
Question Of The Week
Why is my established bed of Ajuga dying?
It was thriving just a month ago here in southeast Oklahoma.
Anyway, it’s aground cover.It usually grows in the shade.
It spreads, it has either purple or green or sometimes, pink foliage.
I just hate them.
I’ll never serve them again."
So, when I was growing up we never had them.
It wasn’t until I moved to Alabama that I had my first collard greens.
And I got to say,I love collard greenswith a big L-O-V-E.
Does that make me Southern or what?
My wife and I fix them in lots of different ways.
We steam, saute, and add them in all sorts of dishes.
And the good thing about them, they’re very healthy for you.
They’re high in vitamins A and C and calcium and fiber.
Now’s a good time for you to plant collards in your garden.
Rather than sowing seeds, I prefer to buy potted seedlings at the garden center.
There’s different selections that we know do well, and have been planted for generations.