Plant once, harvest
for years: A well-maintained bed of this sweet, slender veggie will stay
productive for up to 15 years, and, with its vibrant, ferny foliage, asparagus
makes an excellent ornamental.
Gardeners have been growing asparagus (Asparagus
officinalis) for more than 2,000 years, and this sweet, slender veggie’s
staying power is no surprise: A well-maintained asparagus bed will start
bearing one year after planting and will stay productive for 10 to 15 years.
A hardy perennial adapted in Zones 3 to 8, asparagus grows
best in well-drained soil with a near-neutral pH between 6.5 and 7.5. The
edible part of the asparagus plant is the young stem shoot, which emerges as
soil temperatures rise above 50 degrees Fahrenheit in spring.
Types to Try
Because asparagus stays productive for so long, it’s
important to plant the best variety available for your area. In cold climates,
‘Guelph Millennium’ and other varieties that emerge late often escape damage
from spring freezes. In warm climates, early, heat-tolerant varieties such as
‘Apollo’ and ‘UC-157’ produce well before the weather turns hot. Gardeners in
Zones 4 to 6 have a wider selection of varieties, including ‘Jersey Giant,’
‘Jersey Knight’ and other hybrids bred in New Jersey for improved disease
resistance and better productivity.
When to Plant
Plant asparagus crowns (dormant roots of 1-year-old plants)
in spring at about the same time you would plant potatoes, but don’t rush to
plant them if your soil is still cold. A few varieties, such as open-pollinated
‘Purple Passion’ and hybrid ‘Sweet Purple,’ can be grown from seed. Start seeds
indoors in spring and set out the seedlings when they are 12 to 14 weeks old,
just after your last spring frost. Start with asparagus crowns, however, to
eliminate the year of tedious weeding that comes with starting from seed.
How to Plant
Choose a site with fertile soil that’s clear of perennial
weeds and grasses. A single row of asparagus plants set 15 inches apart will
fill in to form a 24- inch-wide bed, or you can grow a double row in a
36-inch-wide bed. Locate asparagus along the back or side of your garden, as
5-foot-tall asparagus fronds will shade any nearby plants. A bed of 25 mature
plants will produce about 10 pounds of asparagus per year.
Asparagus craves phosphorus, which is usually abundant in
composted manure and in compost made from kitchen waste. Add a 2-inch layer of
rich, weed-free compost to your soil before planting. Dig a trench 4 inches
deep and 10 inches wide in the amended soil and arrange the crowns in the
bottom, about 15 inches apart. Refill the trench without stepping on the bed.
Maintaining Your Bed
Controlling weeds during the first two seasons will require
rigorous weeding by hand. Pull out weeds early and often, and mulch with hay,
grass clippings or another organic material to suppress weeds and maintain
moisture. Weeds will become less of an issue as the plants fill in.
In early winter, after several hard freezes have damaged
your asparagus fronds, cut them off and compost them to interrupt the life
cycles of insects and diseases. Fertilize the bed with a 1-inch layer of rich,
weed-free compost or manure topped with 3 inches of straw, rotted sawdust or
another weed-free mulch. Clean spears will push up through the mulch in spring.
Fertilize your asparagus again in early summer after you’ve stopped harvesting
spears. You can top-dress with a balanced organic fertilizer, or scatter
another inch of rich, weed-free compost over the decomposing mulch.
Harvesting and
Storage
The exact dates of your spring picking season can vary by two
weeks or more because of variations in soil temperature from year to year. Snap
off spears longer than 4 inches at the soil line as soon as they appear in
spring. As long as a new planting grew vigorously its first season (and your
growing season is not extremely short), you can harvest spears for two weeks
after your planting is a year old.
The next season, harvest all spears that appear for the
first four weeks of active growth. In your third season you can harvest
asparagus for six weeks, and by the fourth year the plants will be strong
enough to tolerate a full eight-week harvest season.
Promptly refrigerate your harvested asparagus. You can
pickle, dry, or blanch and then freeze bumper crops.
Growing Tips and
Ideas
Get Psyched for Your Spears. Prepare your bed when you order
your asparagus crowns so you can plant them as soon as they arrive.
Choose Male Plants. Most hybrid asparagus varieties are able
to produce seven or more spears per mature plant because they are male plants
that don’t expend energy producing seeds. However, if you’re growing
open-pollinated or hybrid varieties that do include seed-producing female
plants, dig out female plants to limit reseeding. Asparagus seedlings are
difficult to pull and may become bothersome weeds in some climates.
Tuck Them In. Freezing temperatures ruin asparagus spears,
so harvest yours before any harsh spring weather. During the first weeks of the
harvest season, covering beds with row cover tunnels held aloft with hoops can
help limit damage from the cold.
An Edible Aesthetic. Ferny fronds of asparagus are a
beautiful addition to edible landscaping beds, and asparagus stems make great
filler material in flower arrangements.
Outsmart Asparagus
Beetles
Two species of asparagus beetles damage spears and fronds
throughout North America: the common asparagus beetle (black, white and
red-orange) and the spotted asparagus beetle (red-orange with black spots),
which are both about a third of an inch long.
Asparagus beetles overwinter in plant debris, so removing
fronds in winter will reduce their numbers. Lady beetles and several small
wasps are major asparagus beetle predators.
Handpick adult asparagus beetles early in the morning when
it’s too cool for them to fly. Asparagus beetle eggs look like stubby, brown
hairs. Wipe them off of spears with a damp cloth. After they’ve begun feeding
on fronds, asparagus beetle larvae (soft, gray, slug-like creatures with black
heads) are unable to crawl back up plants if swept off with a broom. Many
gardeners allow their poultry to clean up the asparagus bed for three to five
days at the end of the harvest season to rid the plot of overwintering adults.
If you have an asparagus beetle problem but don’t have
poultry, set aside a section of your asparagus to serve as a spring trap crop.
Don’t cut the spears in spring within the plot, but patrol often to collect as
many asparagus beetles as you can. In late summer, cut the fronds 2 inches from
the ground and compost them. In three weeks or so, you can harvest a fall crop
of spears from your trap crop plot.
In the Kitchen
Delicate spears of asparagus are welcome at every meal. For
breakfast, asparagus pairs beautifully with bacon, eggs, ham or melon. Layer
lightly steamed spears onto lunch sandwiches, or incorporate them into pasta
salads, quiches or bread puddings. Asparagus risotto can round out dinner, or
you can serve asparagus roasted, braised or grilled as a side dish.
Asparagus cooks quickly. Toss spears with olive oil, salt
and pepper, and then grill for just two to three minutes. You can make roasted
asparagus by cooking oiled and seasoned spears in an open pan in an oven at 450
degrees Fahrenheit for eight to 10 minutes.
Asparagus is an excellent source of folacin, a B vitamin
that helps keep the circulatory system strong, and it’s a good source of
potassium and vitamin C. Claims that asparagus fights cancer are based on its
high level of glutathione, a potent antioxidant. Light cooking (such as
steaming) for eight to 10 minutes increases the bioavailability of asparagus’
healthful compounds.
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