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#638 2025 Wrapped – A Year in the Kitchen Garden and Allotment

This week’s episode is the final Veg Grower Podcast of 2025, and I wanted to take a step back and reflect on what has been a huge year here in the kitchen garden and down on the allotment.

From new systems and new beds, to challenges with drought, job changes, and the reminder of just how powerful growing food can be for our mental health, this episode is very much about looking at what worked, what didn’t, and what I’ve learned along the way.


Kitchen Garden Update

2025 has been a brilliant year for the kitchen garden. Being able to step straight outside and spend even a few minutes tidying, mulching or weeding has made a massive difference, especially during busy periods.

One of the biggest upgrades this year was installing an AutoPot system in the greenhouse, and it has more than paid for itself. Tomatoes, cucumbers and other greenhouse crops have thrived with very little intervention, producing an abundance of food for minimal effort.

Other highlights from the kitchen garden include:

  • Adding new beds and keeping a steady flow of crops coming in
  • Growing perennial crops like asparagus and rhubarb from seed
  • Successful straw bale gardening, once the bales were properly conditioned using a high-nitrogen feed
  • Growing food from supermarket produce, including potatoes, garlic, ginger and herbs

Beyond the harvests, the kitchen garden has played a huge role in supporting my mental health this year. During times of change and disruption, simply being outside, focused on small achievable jobs, made a real difference.


Allotment Update

Down on the allotment, 2025 was all about productivity, resilience and learning how to work with less time available.

One of the standout successes this year has been using straw as a mulch. At around £3.50 per bale, it’s been a cost-effective way to protect soil, retain moisture during a very dry year, and massively improve yields – particularly with potatoes.

Other key lessons and highlights include:

  • Producing far more of our own compost using large corrugated iron compost bins
  • Accepting that some crops struggled in the dry conditions, particularly beans and peas
  • Seeing brassicas, potatoes and fruit crops really thrive despite the lack of rain
  • Gradually improving problem areas and boundaries over winter

The goal for 2026 is clear: add even more organic matter, improve soil structure, and push productivity even further.


Recipe of the Week – Bubble and Squeak

This week’s recipe is a proper post-Christmas classic: Bubble and Squeak.

It’s a fantastic way to use up leftover roast potatoes and vegetables, lightly mashed, mixed together and fried until crisp and golden. Perfect with an egg for breakfast, or served alongside cold meats – and it freezes beautifully too.

You’ll find the full recipe on the website.


£5,000 Food Growing Challenge

Every year I aim to grow £5,000 worth of food, based on supermarket prices. While I didn’t quite hit the target in 2025, we still managed an impressive £4,500 worth of home-grown food.

Fruit crops were the real stars this year, with tomatoes, peppers, chillies, cucumbers and soft fruit delivering huge value – and there’s plenty of scope to push that total even higher next year.


Wrapping Up 2025

As I say goodbye to 2025, I want to thank everyone who has listened, commented, shared the podcast, or supported the show through the Supporters Club. Your support genuinely keeps this podcast going.

I’ll be back in 2026 with more growing, more learning, and more food from whatever space you have available.

If you would like to support this podcast then please consider becoming a member of our supporters club or use some of affiliate links below for items you might be buying. We might get a little commission

  • Premier seeds direct for all your seed needs
  • Autopot uk a revolutionary watering system for growing the best veg easily. User discount code auto10rvg for 10%off

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