Spinach Donation Tracker
Quick Links: How & Where to Grow | Temperature | How to Care For | Harvest Signs | Harvesting | Pests | Companions | Varieties | Preservation | Recipes | Michigan Tips | Fun Facts
🌱 How & Where to Grow Spinach:
- Direct sow as soon as soil can be worked (March-April).
- Space seeds 2 inches apart, thin to 4-6 inches in rows 12-18 inches apart.
- Succession plant every 2 weeks for continuous harvest!
- Fall planting in August provides sweetest leaves.
- Sunlight: Full sun to partial shade (4-6 hours minimum).
- Soil Type: Well-drained, fertile soil with pH 6.5-7.0.
- Soil Amendment: Rich in nitrogen – add compost or aged manure.
Spinach is the ultimate cool-season speedster – from seed to salad in just 40 days!
🌡️ Temperature Guidance:
Optimal 50-60°F. Bolts above 75°F. Frost tolerant to 20°F.
- Germination: Seeds germinate at 35-75°F, optimal 45-65°F.
- Best growth: Cool temperatures 50-70°F.
- Bolting trigger: Temperatures above 75°F + long days.
- Frost tolerance: Mature plants survive down to 20°F.
- Fall spinach is sweetest – frost converts starches to sugars!
Michigan’s cool springs and falls are perfect – summer heat makes spinach bolt instantly!
💧 How to Care for:
- Consistent Moisture: Essential for tender leaves and preventing bolting.
- Watering: 1-1.5 inches weekly – keep soil evenly moist.
- Mulch: 2 inches to keep soil cool and moist.
- Fertilizer: Side-dress with nitrogen after thinning.
- Quick growth: Push growth with adequate water and nutrients.
📏 Harvest Signs:
Baby: 2-3 inches. Mature: 4-6 inches. Harvest before bolting!
- Baby spinach: Harvest at 2-3 inches for salads.
- Mature leaves: 4-6 inches long, dark green.
- Timing: 40-50 days from seed, faster in spring.
- Watch for: Center growth elongating = bolting imminent!
- Don’t wait too long – quality declines rapidly once plants mature.
Harvest promptly – spinach goes from perfect to bolted seemingly overnight!
🧺 Harvesting:
Cut outer leaves or whole plant. Morning harvest best. Keep harvesting!
- Cut-and-come-again: Harvest outer leaves, leave center to regrow.
- Whole plant: Cut at soil level when 4-6 leaves present.
- Morning harvest: Leaves are crisp and sweet.
- Clean harvest: Use sharp knife or scissors for clean cuts.
- Succession harvest: New plantings provide continuous supply.
🪲 Michigan Pests:
Leaf miners, aphids, flea beetles, downy mildew.
- Leaf miners: Tunnels in leaves – remove affected leaves.
- Aphids: Cluster on undersides – blast with water.
- Flea beetles: Tiny holes – use row covers.
- Downy mildew: Yellow patches – choose resistant varieties.
- Slugs: Love tender leaves – use beer traps.
🫱🏽🫲🏼 Companions:
Good with peas, beans, brassicas, strawberries. Shade from tall plants.
- Peas and beans: Fix nitrogen for leafy growth.
- Brassicas: Share similar cool-season needs.
- Strawberries: Good ground cover companion.
- Radishes: Quick harvest doesn’t compete.
- Summer shade: Plant under taller crops for extended harvest.
🥬 Varieties:
Spring: ‘Space’, ‘Bloomsdale’. Fall: ‘Winter Bloomsdale’. Slow-bolt: ‘Tyee’.
- ‘Space’: 45 days, smooth leaves, slow to bolt.
- ‘Bloomsdale’: 48 days, savoyed leaves, heirloom.
- ‘Tyee’: 45 days, very slow bolting, disease resistant.
- ‘Winter Bloomsdale’: 47 days, extremely cold hardy.
- ‘Regiment’: 37 days, fast baby spinach.
🫙 Preservation:
Freeze blanched 2 minutes. Fresh 5-7 days. Dehydrate for powder.
- Fresh storage: Unwashed in plastic bag, 5-7 days.
- Freezing: Blanch 2 minutes, squeeze dry, freeze in portions.
- Dehydrating: Makes nutrient-dense powder for smoothies.
- Canning: Only pressure canning – not recommended, loses texture.
- Ice cubes: Blend with water, freeze for smoothies.
🧑🏽🍳 Recipes:
Fresh salads, sautéed with garlic, spanakopita, smoothies, creamed spinach.
- Classic spinach salad with warm bacon dressing.
- Simple sautéed spinach with garlic and lemon.
- Greek spanakopita (spinach pie).
- Green smoothies with frozen spinach.
- Creamed spinach – steakhouse style.
✋🏼 Michigan Tips:
- Plant March 15-April 30 for spring crop.
- Skip summer – spinach bolts in Michigan heat.
- Fall planting August 1-September 15 best!
- Use row covers for earliest spring planting.
- Overwinter varieties with heavy mulch in zone 6b.
- Michigan’s variable spring requires bolt-resistant varieties.
🧠 Fun Facts:
- Spinach has only 7 calories per cup but tons of nutrients!
- Popeye increased U.S. spinach consumption by 33% in the 1930s.
- Originally from Persia (Iran), arrived in Europe via Spain.
- The myth about extreme iron content came from a misplaced decimal point!
- Fresh spinach loses 90% of volume when cooked.
- China produces 92% of the world’s spinach.
- Medieval artists used spinach to make green paint.
- Crystal City, Texas has a statue of Popeye for saving the spinach industry!
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