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Vermont Garden Journal: Understanding The Ground Cherry

Peter Topp Enge Jonasen
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iStock
Ground cherries grow close to the ground. The "cherry" refers to the yellow fruit inside the papery husk. The fruits have a sweet flavor with just a hint of tomato.

When is a tomato, not a tomato? When it’s a cherry? If that doesn’t make much sense, you’ll understand the confusion over ground cherries. These tomato family fruits grow close to the ground. The “cherry” refers to the yellow fruit inside the papery husk. The fruits have a sweet flavor with just a hint of tomato.

Ground cherry is native to Chile and Peru. European explorers introduced it to South Africa in the 1800s and that’s how it got one of its common names, the Cape gooseberry. It’s also known as the Inca berry, golden berry or my favorite, Amour en cage, or love in a cage. Ground cherries have also gotten popular. We recently returned from a vacation in Maine and saw ground cherries for sale for $6/pint at a local market. Luckily, you don’t have to spend that kind of money to have these tasty treats in your garden.

If you can grow tomatoes, you can grow ground cherries. Select named varieties such as ‘Goldie’ and start them indoors 6 weeks before your last frost. Transplant seedlings into well-drained, compost-amended soil in full sun. I pay little attention to our ground cherries until September when they come into full glory. Harvest the papery husks when they turn yellow or drop off the plant.  The “love in a cage” is the yellow fruits inside that keep producing until frost.

Once you grow ground cherries in your garden you’ll have them forever. They self sow readily. Each spring I thin out our patch of seedlings, spacing them 1 foot apart. You can eat them fresh, or make pies, salsa, jams or bread. You can even buy some ground cherry fruits at the local farmer’s market now and spread some of the fruits in your garden. The seeds will survive the winter and germinate next spring.

And now for this week's tip, cut back amaryllis bulbs growing in pots and store them in a dark basement. Keep them without water for 6 weeks then bring them into a sunny room to bloom this winter.

Next week on the Vermont Garden Journal, I'll be talking about species tulips. Until then, I'll be seeing you in the garden.

Resources:

Charlie Nardozzi is a nationally recognized garden writer, radio and TV show host, consultant, and speaker. Charlie is the host of All Things Gardening on Sunday mornings at 9:35 during Weekend Edition on Vermont Public. Charlie is a guest on Vermont Public's Vermont Edition during the growing season. He also offers garden tips on local television and is a frequent guest on national programs.
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