G1954

Vegetables as Ornamentals

This guide explores the landscaping and color options­ available by using fruits as ornamentals.


Dale T. Lindgren, Extension Specialist
Kim A. Todd, Extension Specialist
Elizabeth M. Killinger, Extension Educator


Many vegetables have ornamental as well as food value, and can be used as ornamentals where space for a traditional food garden is limited. They also can be incorporated as plantings in decorative containers on porches, patios and decks — even in small spaces such as apartments. They have ornamental value in the garden, and in the home, as colorful or unusual decorations in conjunction with floral arrangements.

Only your imagination limits the use of vegetables as ornamentals.

The proper site is essential for success. It should be well-drained with good fertility and adequate sunlight specific to each plant type. Most vegetables prefer 6 to 8 hours of direct sunlight each day. Containers can be filled with plants suited to nearly any location and can be moved to take advantage of suitable environmental conditions.

Perennial Vegetables

Vegetables can be classified as perennials or annuals. The most commonly grown perennial vegetables in Nebraska are asparagus and rhubarb. The purple spears of ‘Purple Majesty­’ asparagus add an unusual color and form to the garden. Allowing­ the fronds of asparagus to stand through the growing­ season adds fine texture and height to the garden, with the added bonus of gold fall color. Asparagus ferns provide a soft, airy background to set off flowering plants.

Rhubarb contributes bold-textured foliage that remains visible during the entire growing season. Cultivars with deep red stems and midribs are available and add a colorful accent to the garden. Both asparagus and rhubarb require full sun and well-drained soil. Place them in locations where they will not be disturbed during garden preparation. If given proper conditions, these vegetables will live and produce for years. Caution: Rhubarb leaves, while pretty, are poisonous. The stalks are fine to eat, however.

Annual Vegetables

Annual vegetables introduce a variety of colors and shapes to the garden. Gardeners can choose different types each year to not only add interest but change the appearance of their garden and the bounty on their table.

Beans

Scarlet runner beans are often located with flower seed in garden stores as well as in seed catalogs. Although they are grown for their showy red flowers, the pods are edible. Harvested regularly, the plants will continue to flower for most of the growing season. Runner beans should be grown on a trellis and can provide shade for a patio or porch. The vines can be removed after frost to let the winter sun shine through.

There are also bush beans with ornamental characteristics. ‘Royal Burgundy’ and ‘Royalty’ bear dark-purple pods which also turn green when cooked. There are hundreds of old and new cultivars of dry beans with a multitude of seed colors and color patterns. While the plants are not necessarily ornamental, storing the seed in clear jars can add color to the kitchen.

Eggplant

Eggplant fruit comes in many shapes, sizes and colors, ranging from the miniature pure white of ‘Easter Egg’ to violet, purple or lavender Italian cultivars, and traditional dark black-purple American cultivars. Forms range from egg-shaped to almost cylindrical. Specialty seed catalogs are good sources for unusual eggplant cultivars.

Kale

Flowering kale prefers cool growing conditions and does well when planted in mid to late summer. Its colors intensify as fall temperatures drop. It is typically used as an edger or ornamental texture plant in containers. Green outer leaves surround white or reddish-purple, crinkled, inner leaves, making the entire vegetative plant look like a large flower. Many garden centers carry flowering kale plants in late summer.

Leaf Lettuce, Spinach, and Mustard

Most leafy vegetables grown as ornamentals perform best in cooler conditions and will tolerate cooler soils than those needed for warm-season vegetables. This makes them very useful as early season extenders. They can also be planted as a fall crop, taking the place of summer annuals or hiding the gaps left by removal of other vegetables. Check seed packets for days to maturity and compare that against the average hard freeze date for your location to determine your best fall planting date.

Leaf lettuces, spinach and mustard are usually grown as early spring or late summer-to-fall crops and are replaced with other vegetables or annual flowers after they have passed their peak performance. Lettuce and spinach will become bitter and bolt (go to seed) when days lengthen and the weather turns warm. Look for lettuce cultivars with curly leaves, red coloration or deeply lobed foliage. Lettuce mixes can be very ornamental, containing a variety of different textures, sizes, and colors. These mixes may also contain radicchio, endive, and other edible greens.

Spinach is available with large, flat leaves or with glossy leaves that are deeply wrinkled, or savoyed. The savoy-type spinaches are quite ornamental but harder to clean for eating.

Mustard can get fairly large. Cultivars with red leaves or green leaves with red margins are commonly grown. Mustard will withstand warmer temperatures for a longer time than lettuce or spinach before it bolts.

Figure 1. Ornamental corn offers variety in both ear color and size.
Figure 1. Ornamental corn offers variety in both ear color and size.
 
Figure 2. Ornamental peppers need full sun and consistent moisture for best production and color development.
Figure 2. Ornamental peppers need full sun and consistent moisture for best production and color development.

Okra

Although okra isn’t as common in the Great Plains as it is in southern states, it will perform well if given full sun, good soil, and adequate water. The 2- to 3-inch pale yellow flowers of this plant from the mallow family are ornamental in their own right. Cultivars with red pods or reddish foliage can be found. The pods are attractive in dried arrangements.

Ornamental Corn

Ornamental corn can be grown both for stalk color and decorative ears (Figure 1). Gardeners can find many cultivars with wide variations in ear size and color. Small strawberry popcorn ears and miniature corn in a variety of colors can be used in wreaths and arrangements. Plant ornamental corn in unusual patterns rather than rows or blocks, or use it as a temporary fence. The husks of the heirloom variety ‘Bloody Butcher’ are dark red, as are the kernels. Isolate individual cultivars of ornamental corn from one another and from sweet corn to prevent cross-pollination.

Peppers

The number of sweet and hot pepper culti­vars with ornamental value has increased substantially in recent­ years (Figure 2). The dark green foliage of sweet peppers contrasts with fruit colors such as lilac, green, white, brown, orange, yellow, and red. ‘Jingle Bells’ sweet peppers are bite-sized morsels in hot colors. Hot peppers come in a variety of shapes and colors, from long and pointed to round. Some peppers are sold specifically as ornamental plants, often as potted plants. The fruits of these plants are edible, although usually extremely hot and often bitter so be cautious in eating them. The All American Selection ‘Black Pearl’ has perfectly round black peppers on dark purple foliage. Peppers need full sun and consistent moisture for best production and color development.

Swiss Chard and Beets

Swiss chard has bright and distinct ribbed leaves with stems that vary in color from red to yellow, making them an excellent ornamental vegetable. The bright crimson stalks of rhubarb chard have crinkled, dark-green leaves with red veins. Seeds can be started indoors for early planting, or small plants can be purchased at garden centers. Chard tolerates cold weather and frost as well as hot summer days. If the foliage becomes tattered, rejuvenate the plants by cutting off the foliage a few inches above the ground. New leaves with a more delicate flavor than the old ones will quickly be produced. ‘Bright Lights’ produces plants with petioles and midribs in cream, salmon, orange, pink and red.

While most people grow beets for the edible root, the tops are also edible and can be quite ornamental. ‘Bull’s Blood’ has deep red foliage that creates interest in borders and in salad bowls.

Sweet Potatoes

Ornamental sweet potatoes have increased in use the last few years, mainly as container plants. They can be used in window boxes, in patio pots, hanging baskets, in large outdoor planters and as ground covers. They are valuable because of their trailing vines with lime-green, purple and multicolored foliage. They can be used alone or in mixed container plantings. Sweet potatoes are not winter-hardy but can be purchased each year or started from cuttings.

Tomatoes

Tomatoes are available in a wide range of colors (red, orange, yellow, pink, green, and burgundy) and in many sizes and shapes. Interest in heirloom tomatoes and tomatoes with different shapes and colors has spurred demand for these older or unusual cultivars. Determinate, or bush, tomato plants are attractive when grown in large containers and grow shorter with concentrated fruit set. They need smaller cages/stakes or can be grown without support.

Indeterminate, or vine-type, tomato plants usually yield larger, more perfect fruit over a longer period if supported in a cage or staked and pruned. Caging allows the fruit to be seen, providing red or orange flashes through the leaf canopy, and keeps the fruit off the ground. The indeterminate vines of grape tomatoes and many cherry or pear tomatoes continue to spread throughout the season, with terminal clusters of oval to round fruits. Dwarf indeterminate plants are naturally small, but set fruit throughout the growing season. Choose disease-resistant cultivars to produce quality fruit and to maintain a pleasing appearance of the plants.

Figure 3. Pumpkins can lend some fall color to your yard.
Figure 3. Pumpkins can lend some fall color to your yard.

Squash, Gourds, Pumpkins and Cucumbers

Vine crops, including squash, gourds, pumpkins and cucumbers, can be grown on trellises, fences, stakes, or ornamental supports in containers. They can provide season shade for a patio or porch and can also be used as temporary screens. If you grow vines on a slanted support made from slats or 1 x 2 inch dimension lumber, cool season crops or flowers needing partial shade can grow underneath, resulting in a very efficient use of space. When grown on vertical surfaces, heavy vegetables such as pumpkins may need to be supported with slings to avoid breaking the vines.

Squash, gourds, pumpkins and cucumbers have lush foliage and showy blossoms, as well as interestingly shaped fruit (Figure 3). Plants with bush-type growth make nice specimen plants at the corner of a patio, yard, or building. Bush-type plants require less area than vining types, making them ideal when space is limited, such as small spaces or containers.

While the lush foliage and showy flowers of these vine crops add bold texture and some color to the garden, it’s the fruit’s interesting shapes and colors that attract the most attention. Winter squash, pumpkins, and gourds make colorful fall decorations, and most can be stored for cooking throughout the winter.

Cross-pollination can produce either oddities or very beautiful fruits. Most vines also have large, quick-germinating seed, making them easy for children and beginning gardeners to grow. Vines may even spring from seeds of composted plants.

In Nebraska, viral diseases from squash vine borers, cucumber beetles, and squash bugs can be a problem. Inspect plants regularly to determine if insect control is necessary. Those infected with viruses or bacterial wilt should be pulled up and disposed of in the trash, not in the compost pile.

Amaranth

Amaranth is a dramatic and unusual annual grain that can be included in an ornamental vegetable planting. Its huge, pointed, rounded or feathery heads are orange, red, or green and its top bold foliage may also show these colors.

Table I contains a sampling of the many vegetable cultivars with ornamental value that have performed well in Nebraska. Many others are available. Plants and seeds of unusual and ornamental cultivars may have limited availability at local garden centers. Mail order and on-line suppliers are often good sources for novelty types of vegetables and vegetable cultivars. Read the descriptions carefully to get the characteristics you are seeking, such as colorful fruit or foliage, compact growth habit, or days to maturity.

Table I. Vegetable cultivars with ornamental value that have performed well in Nebraska.
Vegetable Cultivar Description
Asparagus Purple Passion Attractive purple spears, turn green when cooked
Beans Royal Burgundy Purple pods
Royalty Purple pods
Eggplant Easter Egg Small, white, egg-shaped fruit
Ghostbuster White fruit
Little Fingers Long, skinny, dark purple fruit
Pumpkin on a Stick Small pumpkin-like fruits, spiny leaves
Rosa Bianca Violet and white fruit
Hot Pepper Black Pearl Small black fruit mature to bright red
Chinese Five Color Changes to 5 colors
Copacabana Very prolific and colorful
Habanero or Scotch Bonnet Hottest pepper available, has a unique fruity flavor
Super Chile Good for drying and decoration
Turkish Orange Tennis ball size, orange color
White Bullet Fruit turns green to gold to ivory white, 1” long
Lettuce Red Sails Leaf type, burgundy
Revolution Looseleaf, deep red foliage color
Okra Annie Oakley II Compact plants, slender pods
Burgundy Burgundy pods
Jade Productive, early
Ornamental Corn Baby Blue (mini) Miniature ears, robin’s egg blue
Bloody Butcher Husks and kernels red
Carousel Multicolored kernels
Fiesta Multicolored kernels, purple husks
Seneca Red Stalker Purple stalked plants
Strawberry Popcorn Small ears of red popcorn
Pumpkin Baby Bear Small, 4”-6” diameter
Baby Boo White skin, 3” diameter
Bushkin Short-vine plants, thick flesh
Jack Be Little Orange skin, 3” diameter
Lumina White pumpkins for painting or carving
Spirit Semi-bush jack-o’-lantern
Triple Treat Jack-o’-lantern with naked seeds
Rhubarb Canada Red Red stalks
MacDonald Bright red stalks
Summer Squash Blondie Zucchini Ivory colored zucchini
Gold Rush Zucchini Bright gold zucchini
Multipik Fruit are yellow from the time they are first formed
Scallop Peter Pan Hybrid green scallop fruit
Seneca Hybrid Zucchini Dark green zucchini
Sunburst Bright yellow scallop fruit
Sweet Pepper Gypsy Orange at maturity, 4” x 2½”
Hungarian Sweet Wax Blocky fruit, 2” x 4”
Jingle Bells 1½” x 1½” fruit, color changes from green to red, good for containers
Sweet Banana 5” x 1½” fruit, fruit light yellow, changing to red
Sweet Cherry Small fruit, red at maturity
Tangerine Dream Shiny red-orange, 3” fruit
Sweet Potato Ace of Spades Vine, dark purple heart-shaped leaves
Blackie Vine, dark purple, indented leaves
Margarita Vine, lemon-lime foliage
Swiss Chard Bright Lights Mixed colors
Rhubarb Chard Red stems, savoyed foliage
Tomato Husky Cherry Red Dwarf, indeterminate plants
Husky Gold Dwarf, indeterminate plants
Husky Red Dwarf, indeterminate plants
Sungold Clusters of very sweet, orange fruits
Tumbler Cascading, container plant, cherry-like fruit
Winter Squash Cream of the Crop Ivory colored acorn squash
Orangetti Spaghetti Golden orange spaghetti squash
Turks Turban Multi-colored edible fruits

 

This publication has been peer reviewed.

Disclaimer

Reference to commercial products or trade names is made with the understanding that no discrimination is intended of those not mentioned and no endorsement by University of Nebraska–Lincoln Extension is implied for those mentioned.


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Index: Lawn and Garden
Vegetables
Issued June 2009