#1 My Singular Potato That I Grew Years Back, All Fixed Up

If you're keen to try your hand at growing your own food, what's stopping you? While you might think you need to make a trip to the nursery to buy seeds or seedlings, you actually don't. There's a load of fruit and vegetables you can grow using kitchen scraps and water. Most won't need soil in the beginning.
Carrots, onions, potatoes, garlic, tomatoes, celery and herb scraps are among the many things you'll want to think twice about tossing in the bin the next time you're cooking.
Keep scrolling to find out just how easy it is...
With vegetables like celery, green onions, leeks, and lettuce, you'll want to keep the bottom parts.
Green onions can be planted directly in soil if the roots are still attached. For the other veg, all you need to do is place the bottoms in a shallow bowl or glass of water on the windowsill and change the water daily until roots develop.
Voila! You can plant them in pots of soil or in your garden. And wait for your mighty, or not-so-mighty harvest.
Garlic is also a fairly easy one for beginners. "Place about 3 inches of the white part of green onion – with the roots attached – in a jar and in a few days, you’ll start to see regrowth," advises food blog Simple Bites. "For garlic, choose a whole bulb or individual cloves that have started to send out green sprouts – we tend to see this a lot in the winter months as the garlic gets older."
Perennial herbs like sage, thyme and mint are just as easy...
Take a stem, put it in a glass of water and make sure the leaves are above water level. Within a few weeks, it should begin to root. And once the roots reach around an inch long, transfer the herbs into a container of potting soil, or straight into your garden.
"If you want to try growing basil yourself, take a four- or six-inch cutting below a leaf node," suggests the University of Michigan School for Environment and Sustainability (SEAS) site. "Be sure the cutting isn't flowering. Place it in water in a sunny location until roots start to grow. When they've reached approximately two inches, repot the cutting in soil."
#8 My Eggplant Decided To Give It One More Go And Blessed Me With This Generous Bounty As Its Last Hurrah!

One of my personal favorites to grow from kitchen scraps is tomatoes. You'll find a range of ways to do this. And some might seem time-consuming. But there's a secret I'll let you in on a little later.
A SEAS student writes that Taco Tuesday prompted a co-worker to propagate tomatoes using seeds, adding that it involves more time and care than the other veggies the group had tried.
"She removed the seeds from tomatoes-on-the-vine and placed them on a piece of newspaper. (You could also use paper towels but she chose newspaper to be more sustainable.) To do this, gently scrape or rinse the gooey layer from around the seed. If left on, it will keep the seeds from sprouting," reads the site.
"Gently fold up the seeds inside the newspaper and dampen it slightly (below). Place the damp, folded-up newspaper in a container with a lid (she reused a sour cream container) or a Ziploc bag, close it up, and place it in a sunny spot for a few days. Check often to make sure the newspaper stays moist so the seeds can begin to sprout," adds the student.
#10 I Grew "Micro Gold" Tomatoes In My Hydroponic Unit. This Is A Very Good Harvest Given My Two Plants Were Both Under 4 Inches Tall

The student adds that after three to five days, you'll notice the seeds starting to sprout. This is when you can plant them. Use any small container, cup, jar or pot you have available.
"Gently plant each sprouted seed in the container with the sprouted side pointing down," advises the site, adding that you shouldn't plant too deep. But rather just gently press it down into the soil to make sure it can take root. Gently water or mist just so the top of the soil stays moist. Then leave it in a sunny spot and water regularly to keep the top layer of soil moist.
Once they sprout, each little plant will need a container of its own, notes the budding farmer.
We did warn you that some methods are time-consuming. But also promised there's an easier way. Keep scrolling for that...
#14 My First Lemon >*<?

I've tried a few different ways to grow tomatoes from kitchen scraps or seeds. And I've found that the one that bears the most fruit (literally) is hands-down the easiest.
As an experiment, I sliced up a few cherry tomatoes and put them straight into a container of potting soil. I left the pot outside and covered it with a ziplock bag. I also made sure to keep the soil moist. Today, I have massive tomato plants bearing enough red babies for me to never have to buy any at the store.
#17 Behold My Giant Cucamelon Harvest!

They'll start sprouting into tiny seedlings a few weeks after you plant them and just make sure to keep watering them. You can take the ziplock bag off once the seedlings have grown a bit. And you can transfer the seedlings into a bigger pot or straight into the garden.
I use a planter box for mine and I attach the stems to a trellis to hold the plants up when they bear fruit and get heavy.
#20 Garlic For Months. The Village Will Never Starve Ever Again With Me As The Farmer


















