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    The Farmer Diaries

    Texas farmer nurtures seedlings to create foundation for new garden

    Marshall Hinsley
    Feb 9, 2014 | 6:00 am

    The 2014 garden begins propitiously. Three days after I sowed my first seeds in starter trays, sprouts began to pop up: kale, broccoli, cabbage, collard greens, Swiss chard and mint. The summer crops — tomatoes, basil, eggplant — emerged more slowly, provoking me to worry that they might not sprout at all. But in the three weeks since I began, everything I planted has sprung to life and is putting on good growth.

    My selection of plants is uniquely suited to the Texas climate. When I transplant them into my garden beds in March, after the threat of frost has passed, I will have an advantage in producing my own food because of their ability to withstand the summer heat and drought like few other varieties can.

    My selection of plants is uniquely suited to the Texas climate. They can withstand the summer heat and drought like few other varieties can.

    At first, the seedlings needed nothing but occasional watering to keep the seed starting medium moist. For as long as the seedlings sport their cotyledons — the embryonic leaves that unfurl first and nourish the seedling for the first week or so — they need no fertilizer.

    Once their true leaves begin to dominate, they're ready to take in added nutrients. I start my seedlings with a foliar spray of Maxicrop liquefied seaweed, once every two or three days. Liquefied seaweed is a weak fertilizer, so there's no chance of it burning the tender seedlings while it gives them trace minerals and micronutrients and stimulates their growth.

    Once every two weeks, I dilute Medina's Hasta Gro liquid fertilizer in a ratio of half an ounce of fertilizer per gallon of rainwater for a more nutritious foliar spray. ​Within an hour of spraying it on my seedlings, they become vividly green and sturdy.

    Hasta Gro is not an organic fertilizer, in the purest definition of the term. But because of its low salt content, it doesn't destroy the fertility of soil like the fertilizers used in industrial agriculture do, so I feel confident in using it.

    So far, not a single seedling has succumbed to "damping off," a condition in which fungus overtakes the soil and kills a seedling. I credit the medium I mixed; it's composed of two sterile ingredients, coconut coir and vermiculite, and is therefore less prone to harbor pathogens. Still, I allow the medium to dry a little on the surface between waterings; there's no use in pushing my luck.

    Although I planted two or more seeds in each cell of my six-pack starter trays so there would be a plant in each cell, a few are empty; it's the way things go. My options: I can ignore the empty cells, and wholly alter overnight my obsession with things being complete, or I can fill them in with fresh seed.

    With the hardier seedlings of peppers, tomatoes and eggplant, I can re-home into an empty cell one of the extra seedlings from the cells where two seeds germinated.

    Not all seedlings can be pried from their neighbor without ruining both. I use a chopstick for this sort of "seedling surgery."

    Not all seedlings can be pried from their neighbor without ruining both. It works best if the seedlings have an inch or more of clearance. I use a chopstick for this sort of "seedling surgery."

    I insert the chopstick an inch down into the starting mix and half an inch from the seedling. Then, while holding the seedling by one of its leaves — not the stalk — I pull up on the plant and bend up the mix with the chopstick, freeing the seedling from the mix with just a clump of it on its roots.

    I make an opening in the mix of an empty cell that matches the size of the dislodged mix and gently firm the transplanted seedling in place. To complete the transplant, I water the seedling with a few drops of seaweed foliar spray to seat the roots.

    In a week, I will thin out the weaker seedlings in all cells where more than one plant is growing, giving the remaining plant the room it needs to develop healthy roots and a sturdy structure.

    I'm trying a new program this year to identify my seedlings. In past years, I used wooden sticks that would eventually rot and fall away from the tray they once identified. Plastic markers aren't necessarily better: They're subject to the sun bleaching off the ink of permanent markers. Either way, I've ended up with a half dozen trays of plants whose variety of tomato, pepper or marigold I can only guess.

    This year, I've implemented a new marker construction I hope will do the trick. I bought a few plastic plant markers and some foil tape used for duct work in homes. I cut the foil tape into five-inch lengths, affixed it to the markers like a mini flag on a flagpole and wrote the variety on the tape with a ballpoint pen. The result: an embossed foil marker that should hold up to moisture and sunlight without losing its text. At least, that's the plan.

    I am satisfied with the progress of my seedlings so far. Even though I've been starting my own seeds successfully since my teens back in the mid-'80s, I always feel a little surprised when everything works out. Despite my yearly doubts and impatience, the whole process is simple and involves little more than giving the seedlings the few things they need while letting nature take care of the rest.

    Embossed plant markers made of foil tape and plastic markers should stand up to the elements.

      
    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    Embossed plant markers made of foil tape and plastic markers should stand up to the elements.
    unspecified
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    BBQ News

    Dallas brushed aside on Texas Monthly's top 50 BBQ joints list

    Teresa Gubbins
    Eric Sandler
    May 27, 2025 | 12:29 pm
    Smokey Joe's BBQ
    Smokey Joe's
    Smokey Joe's BBQ

    Dallas barbecue restaurants dropped a notch on the hottest barbecue list in Texas, via Texas Monthly magazine, which has issued its new list of the 50 Best Barbecue Joints in Texas.

    The list has 18 restaurants in the Dallas-Fort Worth area, but with a heavy emphasis on Fort Worth. The coveted top 10 includes two Fort Worth favorites: Goldee's Barbecue, a returning player, and for the first time, Dayne's Craft Barbecue in Aledo.

    Here’s the new top 10, in order:

    1. Burnt Bean Co. (Seguin)
    2. LeRoy and Lewis Barbecue (Austin)
    3. Goldee’s Barbecue (Fort Worth)
    4. Redbird BBQ* (Port Neches, near Beaumont)
    5. GW’s BBQ* (San Juan Texas in the Rio Grande Valley)
    6. InterStellar BBQ (Austin)
    7. Dayne’s Craft Barbecue* (Aledo, near Fort Worth)
    8. LaVaca BBQ* (Port Lavaca)
    9. Truth BBQ (Houston)
    10. Evie Mae’s Pit Barbeque (Wolfforth, near Lubbock)

    Published Tuesday, May 27, Texas Monthly’s new list is the latest update to its quadrennial ranking of Texas’ best places for barbecue. The last time they published a list was in 2021. Texas Monthly presents the list as a ranked top 10 with the remaining 40 restaurants listed alphabetically by city. An additional 50 restaurants earn honorable mentions.

    To compile the list, the magazine visited 319 restaurants, including more than 100 personally visited by barbecue editor Daniel Vaughn in January and February, he writes in the list’s introductory essay.

    The four newcomers to the top 10 are marked with an asterisk to make them a little easier to spot. Compared to 2021, Burnt Bean Co. moves up from No. 4 to No. 1, followed by LeRoy & Lewis, which ranked No. 5 in 2021. Goldee’s, ranked No. 1 in 2021, drops two spots, and InterStellar moves from No. 2 to No. 6. Truth and Evie Mae’s are the only restaurants to make the top 10 in 2017, 2021, and 2025, a nod to their consistent excellence.

    Conversely, Snow’s BBQ (Lexington) and Franklin Barbecue (Austin) drop from the top 10 to the second 40 for the first time.

    The overall state of Texas barbecue has never been stronger, but the aura of Dallas BBQ restaurants has dimmed. Cattleack Barbecue (Dallas) dropped out of the top 10 and into the top 50, joining top 50 Dallas-area stalwarts that include Slow Bone, Smokey Joe's BBQ, Hutchins BBQ, Zavala's Barbecue (Grand Prairie) and Hurtado Barbecue (Arlington).

    Meanwhile former Dallas honorable mentions (and one-time Daniel Vaughn favorites) like Oak'd Barbecue, Pecan Lodge, Lockhart Smokehouse, Harris Bar-B-Que in Cedar Hill, Meshack's Bar-B-Que in Garland fell off the list entirely.

    TOP 50
    DFW restaurants that make the Top 50 include:

    Slow Bone BBQ, Dallas. A returnee from 2021, lauded for its sweet potato praline side dish.

    Smokey Joe's BBQ, Dallas. Oak Cliff restaurant has been doing BBQ for 40 years.

    North Texas Smoke BBQ, Decatur. Food trailer with good BBQ and sides, plus free beer.

    Cattleack Barbecue, Farmers Branch. Returning list maker drops down from its top 10 status.

    Smoak Town BBQ, Fate. BBQ trailer in upcoming suburb.

    Sabar BBQ, Fort Worth. Buzzy, Pakistani-inspired BBQ.

    Panther City BBQ, Fort Worth. Returning list maker drops down from its top 10 status.

    Yearby's Barbecue & Waterice, Pilot Point. Barbecue and water ice spot 60 miles north of Fort Worth.

    HONORABLE MENTIONS
    DFW earned eight honorable mentions, as follows:

    Hurtado Barbecue in Arlington. DFW chain also made the list in 2021.

    Smoke 'N Ash BBQ, Arlington. Mom-and-pop earned a Michelin nod as well as a recent appearance on Diners, Drive-ins, and Dives.

    Brix Barbecue, Fort Worth. Lauded for specials like the tomahawk pork chop.

    Smoke-a-Holics, Fort Worth. "Tex-soul" restaurant with "spectacular oxtails" made the list in 2021.

    Zavala's Barbecue, Grand Prairie. Family-owned barbecue spot is another return list-maker.

    Hutchins BBQ, McKinney. Collin County BBQ spot made the list in 2021.

    Patriotic Pig Smokehouse, North Richland Hills. Mid-cities restaurant gets praise for its burgers.

    Smoke Sessions Barbecue, Royse City. BBQ restaurant 32 miles northeast of Dallas.

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