Help for Your Vegetable Garden

tomatoes on a vine

With a career in marketing and consulting, John Carlson, president and founder of Homefront Farmers, decided to switch gears around the time he turned 50โ€”and get into something heโ€™d always hoped to do: farming. โ€œIn addition to a growing interest in organic food, I sensed a desire for simpler, more basic pleasures. In a world where we use so many machines that we donโ€™t fully understand, growing food at home satisfies a more primal need,โ€ he says.

But he also discovered that โ€œwhile many people advocate growing food at home, there werenโ€™t many companies offering to help fill the knowledge gaps that have sprung up in the last few gen- erations since our grandparents moved off of farms. So Homefront Farmers was created to fill those gaps.โ€

The Redding, CT-based company is doing just that. They offer a variety of services, starting with helping families evaluate their space and set up their gardensโ€”including building raised beds, if needed. They also offer help with growing vegetables, berries and fruit trees, and even activities like bee- keeping and maple sugaring.

โ€œWe have a crew of highly trained organic gardeners who make weekly visits to clientsโ€™ homes to plant and tend their gardens,โ€ says Carlson, and they can provide either maintenance plans that last for the whole season or โ€œstart-upโ€ plans that get the garden essentials in place and then let home- owners take it from there.

โ€œMany clients like to learn how to grow, so we can set up our weekly visits as hands-on lessons. Others may be older or too busy, and for them we can do it all, from seeding to harvesting,โ€ he says.

Debra Ponzek Chef GWFF
DEBRA PONZEK, Owner, Aux Delices Gourmet Food Shop

โ€œMy garden may not be the largest, but I love everything I grow, so nothing goes to waste,โ€ says Ponzek, of her home garden, which features super sweet 100 tomatoes, grape tomatoes, jalapeรฑos, red peppers, Japanese eggplant, zucchini, yellow squash, strawberries and summer herbs.

A few of her favorite ways to use the fresh veggies? Soups with either tomatoes (for a gazpacho), or zucchini (for zucchini vichyssoise), roasted tomatoes in olive oil (with which she tops her goat cheese croutons), zucchini tapenade, and thyme- roasted tomatoes (used for bruschetta, basil pesto, and chive oil), she says.

And if you donโ€™t have a green thumb she offers this advice: go with something easier, like herbs, tomatoes or string beans. โ€œItโ€™s so fun and rewarding to eat something you have grown yourself,โ€ she says.

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