Veggies

Here at Reap & Sow we grow a wide range of vegetables with a focus on quality. We’ve selected the varieties that we want to cook with so that our customers can enjoy the flavors and freshness that we want in our own cooking. From baby carrots to heirloom tomatoes and haricot verts - we only grow the best for our customers.


herbs

Herbs are one the main pillars in our cooking. In order to fill our insatiable need for different flavors and tastes we grow over 30 kinds of herbs. We have the old standards like mint, rosemary, and chives, but we also grow herbs such as lemongrass, chervil, and lemon verbena.


Products

We occasionally make some products with our produce! In 2021 we made loads of Ramp & Bacon Jam, Tomato Sauce, Fermented Sodas, Rhubarb Sweet Chili Sauce, Vinegars, Salad Dressings, and much more.


Micros

Microgreens pack loads of flavor and nutrition into a tiny vessel. Their intense taste along with their visual attractiveness can turn a good dish into a great dish. Some of our favorite micros to grow are pea shoots, sunflower shoots, micro radish, micro basil, micro beets, and many more.


Garni

We also grow a wide variety of garnishes. Our best sellers are our edible flowers. We grow nasturtiums, violas, calendulas, borage, anise hyssop, dianthus, garlic chives, bronze fennel, apple blossoms, and more! For garniture we also grow some other fun and beautiful things, such as red-veined sorrel and nasturtium leaves.


Flowers

We grow a small amount of cut flowers. Normally we’d grow more, but the pandemic has unfortunately forced us to largely put cut flowers on hold. While we are still going to grow some flowers, we won’t have a large amount for 2022. But stay tuned to us in the future - cut flower production will return!


Fruit

While we don’t grow a ton of fruit due to space restrictions, we are lucky enough to have wild apples, plums, peaches, blackberries, and black raspberries growing around the farm. Most of our fruit goes to restaurants, but some of it occasionally makes its way into CSA shares or to the Farmer’s Market.