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Different types of bean are harvested at different stages of their growth. Shell beans are picked once the pods are firm and crisp, showing the shape of the bean inside. Pod beans are picked when the seeds in the pod appear plump and firm. Dry beans are picked once the pod is dried and looks dead.
Kidney beans are a dry bean type.
The weeks and the years are fine. It's the days I can't cope with!
I'd grow them like French or Runner beans - just leave them on the vine. This is how I grow Yin Yang beans. I get a good crop - the bean pods are only small with 5 or so beans in each, but you get plenty. And they swell when soaked before cooking. There's a limit to how many you can eat in a season!
Just beware that when you come to harvest them they contain a toxin - this is broken down by boiling them hard for at least 10 minutes - preferably longer. Even 4 or 4 beans can cause quite serious illness if not heated up enough. Cooking them at under 100 degrees can actually make them more toxic, so be careful
Red kidney beans are so cheap to buy either dry or tinned it may not be worthwhile financially to grow them yourself. Personally I try to grow fresh produce - the only stuff I store is onions. I do save seeds from various beans, but tend to eat the beans green and fresh.
I always wondered why i've seen the warning not to eat raw french beans! the term french beans i find a bit confusing - does this mean climbing beans, or dwarf beans? I've eaten both raw (straight off the plant) and it never did me any harm, but its only 2 or 3, not a whole handful!
There's vegetable growing in the family, but I must be adopted Happy Gardening!
Yeah, Protea, I always eat French beans raw off the plant...I never heard it was harmful...maybe I'll become ill now that I know this!
As for growing your own kidney or other dried beans...YES, you should if you can, to save on landfill (tins, plastic packaging) and food miles (trucking tins around the world)
All gardeners know better than other gardeners." -- Chinese Proverb.
It had me confused for a long time, but it seems that the toxin is only contained within the mature beans. If you eat the immature pods there is no issue.
Onset is usually marked by extreme nausea, followed by vomiting, which may be very severe. Diarrhea develops somewhat later (from one to a few hours), and some persons report abdominal pain. Some persons have been hospitalized, but recovery is usually rapid (3 - 4 h after onset of symptoms) and spontaneous. (http://www.cfsan.fda.gov/~mow/chap43.html)
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