Fresh produce in the grocery store is obscenely priced here in the winter.
Except for oranges and apples out of climate storage, we see fruit from the Pacific rim
and Mexico down into South America's west coast.
I've gotten into the habit of eating at least one piece of fruit each day, to hell with the cost
except for Honey Crisp apples (3X the price of all else). Sloppy wet.
Funny because I adore big, sweet California Navel oranges.
Home-grown, sprouted seeds seed mixes have lots of useful nutrition and taste.
Toddy is so right, you have to try sprouting seeds, it won't cost much at all.
Any big jar and a screen lid or many holes in the lid is good enough.
I began by buying bulk Mung Beans and germinating them. One tablespoon of seed looked pretty stupid.
Three tablespoons of mung beans looked so much better.
In a week, I was chopping the sprouts with scissors as the jar was packed full.
I run 4 x 1-liter glass jars. 1 tablespoon of seeds will fill each jar in less than 10 days.
So I stagger the starts 3 days apart.
The jars sit in a cardboard box on a 27C heating pad.
I cut my own plastic screen tops to fit in the typical Bernardin rings.
Do not use packets of garden seed. Too expensive and probably dusted with fungicide.
I run all the jars and lids through the diswasher after every one is emptied.
Failure to do so was just asking for moldy fungus rot.
Lots of fresh water changes during sprouting will not cure this.