Garden on Amalfi coast in Italy, overlooking the sea |
Sunday, January 5, 2025
The Mediterranean diet was rated as the healthiest diet again this year. It comes out number one year after year as the best way to eat for health, a healthy weight, and longevity. It is also yummy and easy to grow anywhere in the US. You can grow a Mediterranean diet garden in your own small space. Eating fresh from the garden is convenient, has the highest nutrition and saves money. I have found that having a garden makes me plan our meals around what is ready to be picked or what I have put up for the winter.
You may think you can't grow what they do in the Mediterranean region here in the Midwest, but you can grow everything they do outside except for citrus and dates. Both can be grown in pots and brought indoors in the winter. I have a Meyer lemon tree that does great spending the spring, summer and fall outdoors and winters indoors. It is in bloom right now in my living room. It does just as well overwintering in a well lit unheated garage or basement.
The healthiest food is the one that is "closest to the root". Fresh produce is teaming with live nutrition and enzymes. As soon as a fruit or vegetable is picked, it begins to die and lose nutritional value. Eating as much fresh, organic and unprocessed is the way to maximize the nutrition you get. Organic foods don't have GMO's, pesticides and herbicides that have less nutritional value and the toxins of the chemicals used on conventional fruit and vegetables. What do the terms GMO, natural, heirloom, organic, hybrid really mean?
Here are Mediterranean garden plants that you can grow in your own backyard. A space as small as 6' x 6' can give you all you can eat spring, summer and fall.
Fruits, vegetables and nuts
Artichokes
Asparagus
Beans-chickpeas, fava beans, snap beans, navy beans
Beets and turnips
Carrots
Celery
Cucumber
Dates (needs to winter indoors or heated greenhouse)
Eggplant
Fennel
Figs
Grapes and grape leaves
Citrus (winter indoors or heated greenhouse)
Greens-lettuce, radicchio, spinach, chard, arugula and others
Mushrooms
Nectarines
Nuts-almonds, pine nuts, pistachio (Zone 7-10), walnuts
Olives (varieties available to Zone 7)
Onions, shallots and leeks
Peaches
Peas
Peppers-sweet and spicy
Potatoes
Radishes
Tomatoes
Zucchini and other squash
Basil
Bay
Chervil
Chives
Cilantro
Dill
Fennel
Garlic
Marjoram and Oregano
Mint
Parsley
Rosemary
Saffron (stamen from crocus flower)
Sage
Tarragon
Thyme
Dates and citrus are the only things on this long list that cannot be grown in our zone outdoors year round. You can get varieties that can be brought into an unheated garage/basement or grown in a heated greenhouse outdoors.
Here in the US, we can grow the high antioxidant berries like raspberries, blackberries and blueberries without any special winter handling since they are native here.
The key to Mediterranean eating is eating lots of vegetables, to plan around what produce is in season, the liberal use of fresh herbs, cooking with olive oil, and very little red meat or processed foods.
What could a small space Mediterranean garden include?
Below is a plan for a 6' x 6' space. Feel free to substitute for the veggies that you prefer to eat. All below can also be grown in pots as well. Edibles that love pots
Herbs (1 each)-thyme, rosemary, sage, oregano and flat leaf parsley
3 basil plants (for pesto and season)
2 tomato plants-1 Roma type for sauces and 1 slicer or cherry type for salads
2 sweet pepper plants
1 bush zucchini plant
1 eggplant
8 red onions
8 garlic plants
Arugula, spinach and lettuce scatter sown
For more info on growing herbs and a kitchen garden: