Sugar Snap Peas
If you enjoy eating fresh peas but aren’t crazy about the idea of picking and shelling bushels of pea pods, then sugar snap peas may be the perfect vegetable to plant in your home garden.
Sugar Snap Peas are delicious and just as easy to grow but eliminate the effort required to shell and prepare the peas for cooking.
With Sugar Snap Peas you get to eat the entire pod with the peas nestled inside. The pods are juicy, crisp, sweet, and crunchy, and in my opinion are best when enjoyed fresh and uncooked right from the garden.
Planting Sugar Snap Peas in the Garden
Edible Podded Peas enjoy cool weather growing conditions and can be planted during early spring, with a second crop planted during late summer for a fall harvest.
Sow Sugar Snap Peas about an inch deep after treating the seed with a nitrogen fixing inoculent designed for peas. The inoculent isn’t required but will help improve growth, result in higher yields, and increase the nitrogen levels “fixed” in your garden’s soil. The inoculant contains a natural bacteria and can be purchased at garden centers or organic gardening suppliers and seed companies on the Internet.
Sugar Snap Peas will grow well in raised beds, the biggest challenge is to space them out evenly. One planting technique is to lay all the seeds out on top of the prepared bed using the desired spacing pattern and the go back and use a finger to press the seeds to the proper depth. You can also make rows along the length of the raised bed, plant the seeds two inches apart and cover.
Care and Maintenance Tips
The peas will quickly germinate and begin growing so you should be prepared to provide some type of pea support to hold the plants upright as they grow taller. The dwarf varieties that only grow a foot or two in height will do fine without additional support from fencing, stakes, or trellis material.
Aside from weeding and watering when needed, there’s not much routine maintenance required to raise your crop of Sugar Snap Peas. The pea vines grow very fast and within a few weeks of planting you will notice blossoms that will quickly be followed by the developing pods.
Harvesting and Using Sugar Snap Peas
Harvest the Sugar Snap Peas when the pods are plump and have reached full size but to enjoy the best flavor don’t allow them to over mature or start to shrivel and dry out on the vines.
Sugar Snap Peas are often cooked by steaming or sauteing, but I think that they are at their best when simply harvested and enjoyed raw with absolutely no cooking. In fact the fresh pods are so delicious that you’ll be tempted to eat half of the harvest right there in the garden.
In addition to the pea pods you can also harvest and enjoy eating the flower blossoms and leafy plant tips or pea shoots. Just be sure that you don’t attempt to eat any portion of the varieties of ”sweet peas” that are grown as ornamental flowers and are not edible.
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April 8th, 2008 at 3:45 pm
[...] Veggie Gardening Tips [...]
June 26th, 2008 at 10:22 pm
I just ate my first home grown sugar snap peas right off the vine! They were so delicious, i think I ate 10 of them without stopping. Should I pick them when they are skinny or plump? I think I’ve seen both recommendations, and now I’m confused.
June 26th, 2008 at 10:30 pm
Hi Carolyn, sugar snap peas are sweet and delicious and often don’t make it out of the garden. Sugar snaps are best harvested when they are plump, after the seeds have filled out within the pods. Edible podded snow peas on the other hand are harvested when the pods are still flat and skinny.
June 29th, 2008 at 5:50 pm
Is there a particular procedure for perserving all the EXTRA Sugar Snap Peas from a wonderful crop so I can enjoy them well into the Autumn?
(Please respond as soon as possible)
Thsnks
June 29th, 2008 at 10:43 pm
Hi Steven, I’m not the best person to ask about preserving veggies from the garden but I’m guessing that freezing may be the best way to preserve your extra sugar snap peas. Canning may be another option but I’m no authority on that either.
July 13th, 2008 at 3:07 pm
Hi just picked my sugar snap peas, ate half of them. I was wandering do I pull the plants out of the garden after I harvest the peas or do they come back again?? My first time planing these.
July 13th, 2008 at 11:32 pm
Sugar Snap Peas don’t produce much in the way of a second crop, so you’re better off pulling the vines after the plants mature and put the garden space to use growing other crops. But rather than pull the vines out it’s probably best to cut the pea vines off at soil level, or if you are not going to replant the area turn the plants under to help build soil fertility and take advantage of the nitrogen-fixing ability of pea plants.
July 24th, 2008 at 9:15 am
Thanks for the info. I was confused between sugar snap and snow peas. I’ll leave mine on the vine to fatten up.
August 20th, 2008 at 3:04 pm
I just pick a bunch of sugar snap peas for the first time. This is the first year that I have grown them in my garden. I cant figure out why they taste so bitter though?