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    The Farmer Diaries

    Farmer's guide to seed: where to store it, when to sow it and when to throw it away

    Marshall Hinsley
    Feb 22, 2015 | 6:00 am

    After experiencing a low turnout of plants started from seeds in my greenhouse this year, I decided it was time to go through the packets I've hoarded over the last several years and sort out the oldest seeds.

    I'm an easy sell for seed companies. Whether I'm browsing through catalogs every January or confronted by a display in a garden center, I have to stop myself from buying two packs of everything.

    There's always something new that I want to try, or I don't have enough of something I've already picked up. The compulsion drives me to shell out at least $300 a year in seed purchases.

    I never plant as many seeds in a year as I buy; maybe a quarter of what I bring home. This is how I've built up a large cache of seeds. I keep them in seven or eight boxes that I label with broad categories: grains and beans; carrots and root vegetables; lettuce and greens; squash, cucumbers and melons; tomatoes and peppers; and herbs and flowers.

    This hoard has become an on-demand seed supply, with a sampling of almost anything I want ready for me to plant whenever the thought strikes me. It works only because most seeds last longer than the date stamped on the back of the packet. But, as I've learned this year, there is a limit to how long a seed will last.

    If I had been more aware of the expected life span of each seed, I could have avoided the huge frustration of preparing seed mix, sowing, watering and weeks later seeing nothing come of my labor. I've since reviewed several sources of information on seed life-expectancy and found that some could last a decade, while others are good for just one season.

    Knowing what to expect will spare me future frustration and wasted money. Here's what I found:

    Buy every year
    I knew there were some crop seeds that needed to be bought each year because they had a brief life span; the problem was that cilantro was the only one I knew about. But after consulting John Sheepers Kitchen Garden Seeds, I've learned why so many of the crops from my seed hoard were hard to get started: Seeds I bought in 2012 were no good by 2014.

    These are the seeds that must be bought fresh each year:

    • Artichokes
    • Arugula
    • Borage
    • Cilantro
    • Chives
    • Chervil
    • Edamame
    • Lovage
    • Fennel
    • Lemongrass
    • Lavender
    • Leeks
    • Oregano
    • Mints
    • Rosemary
    • Thyme
    • Sage
    • Asters
    • Echinacea
    • Salvia
    • Amaranth
    • Verbena

    Two years
    Some seeds will last for the year they're packed and into the next:

    • Beets
    • Endive
    • Dill
    • Dandelion greens
    • Okra
    • Spinach
    • Swiss chard
    • Parsley
    • Watercress
    • Onions
    • Tomatoes (The main reason for my no-show tomatoes this year was my wrong presumption that seed I bought in 2011 was still viable.)
    • Melons
    • Peppers
    • Tomatillo
    • Summer squash
    • Pumpkins
    • Bachelor's Buttons
    • Snapdragons
    • Forget-me-nots
    • Hollyhocks
    • Lupines
    • Morning glories
    • Marigolds
    • Moonflowers

    Three years
    These seeds are reliable for up to three years after purchase:

    • Peas
    • Basil
    • Beans
    • Broccoli
    • Cabbage
    • Carrots
    • Brussels sprouts
    • Cauliflower
    • Celery
    • Eggplant
    • Cucumbers
    • Radishes
    • Lettuce
    • Kale
    • Corn
    • Rutabagas
    • Gourds
    • Nasturtiums
    • Winter squash
    • Four o' clocks
    • Tobacco
    • Cosmos
    • Zinnias
    • Datura

    Four to five years
    My hoard has many packets dated with 2009 and 2010. Most will have to go, except for these:

    • Orach (I don't have any packets of orach, which is a sort of spinach, but if I did, they'd still be good.)
    • Collard greens
    • Turnip, for both root and greens
    • Mustard
    • Sunflowers
    • Celosia
    • Poppies

    Proper storage
    The life span of seeds depends on storage. Storing them in a dark, cool, dry place will prolong their viability. The room I store mine in is exposed to outside temperatures, like a tool shed. This drastically lowered my germination rate.

    At some point, I learned that some seeds can last up to five years and mistakenly applied that number to all of them. Now that I've learned that many seeds are not as long-lived, I will store them in a less vulnerable environment indoors.

    The lifespan of seeds varies greatly.

    Photo by Marshall Hinsley
    The lifespan of seeds varies greatly.
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    Bread News

    Plano bakery and pizzeria Bread Street Boys has some amazing bread

    Teresa Gubbins
    Jan 29, 2026 | 9:17 am
    Bread Street Boys
    Bread Street Boys
    German rye-wheat bread at Bread Street Boys

    There's a hot loaf in town for Dallas bread fanatics thanks to Bread Street Boys, a bakery on the east side of Plano at 2710 S. Rigsbee Dr. #A, that's doing amazing breads, pizzas, and sandwiches.

    Bread Street is a mom & pop from husband-and-wife Yury and Tatiana Stark, who are bringing an old-world, authentic style of sourdough bread that harkens to what they grew up with in Eastern Europe.

    Their menu includes sourdough bread, Italian white, German rye-wheat, ciabatta, and focaccia, along with sourdough pizzas, which they sell from their east Plano bakery.

    German rye
    Their signature and best-seller is the German rye-wheat, an epic bread with a crust that's crisp but not too thick, and a crumb that's moist and chewy — a perfect contrast of textures. The bread has enough artisanal style to please bread snobs but not so heavy that it will scare off those intimidated by a thick crust.

    Rye bread generally has a darker color and dense texture, but Bread Boys mixes in wheat flour to create a softer texture yet still retaining rye's distinctive malty flavor.

    "Our rye bread is especially popular among Eastern Europeans who grew up with it and miss it from their childhood," Tatiana says. "That's a big part of our story — we both moved here from Belarus where good natural bread is a part of almost every meal, and we couldn't find anything like that here. Yury and I would spend time with our grandparents during summer break, helping make bread from scratch, and we missed that quality and flavor."

    How they met
    The couple has a sweet story. They knew each other when they were young, but Tatiana's family moved to the U.S. in 2000 when she was 14. They kept in touch over the years and realized they were meant for each other.

    "He moved here eight years ago, and we got married and had two kids," she says.

    Yury has an entrepreneurial streak so they founded the bakery in 2022, with Tatiana leaving her corporate job to form the quintessential mom & pop.

    They built the bakery in a former warehouse from scratch — it took them nearly a year — and then went door-to-door offering samples of their bread. It can now be found at gourmet grocery stores such as Jimmy's Food Store, European Delicatessen Too in Plano, Kuby's Sausage House in Snider Plaza, and Georgia's Farmers Market in Plano. (A full list of where to buy their bread is here.)

    Bread Street Boys pizza Bread Street Boys pizzaBread Street Boys

    Pizza
    The pizzas were a natural offshoot. They make their crust with sourdough, which adds a complexity and toasty quality, elevating it from your everyday pie, in varieties such as pepperoni, margherita, BBQ chicken, veggie, and capricciosa topped with ham, artichokes, tomatoes, and mushrooms. Prices range from $17 to $20.

    "Like our breads, our pizza crust dough incorporates a sourdough starter," Tatiana says. "There's a common misconception that sourdough means it's sour, but it's really about natural fermentation, which not only creates a better flavor, it also makes it more digestible and nutritious."

    The fact that sourdough is naturally leavened — with no preservatives or dough conditioners, nothing artificial — is important to them, and they also use unenriched flour.

    "I care a lot about nutrition, especially for children, and we try to eat as healthy as possible," Tatiana says. "One of our dreams is to bring our bread to local schools."

    The pizza can be ordered online, and Bread Street is partnered with delivery services, but Tatiana says that many customers like to drop in.

    "A lot of our customers stop by and pick it up — it's kind of a glamorous hole in the wall — I guess they find it charming," she says.

    Sandwiches
    Their latest adventure is a line of sandwiches made on their house bread, which they sell at the Dallas Farmers Market.

    "We're at the Dallas Farmers Market every weekend when the shed is open," Tatiana says. "We sell our bread there, and it's the only place where we've been selling the sandwiches. We do some unusual combinations like the Breadwinner, a sweet-and-savory sandwich with turkey, lettuce, bacon, a spread with grated cheese and pecans, and peach preserves which adds an interesting kick. People love them, so we're going to start selling them at our bakery."

    The name
    The name "Bread Street Boys" has a certain attitude but also weaves in a few elements, some personal.

    "'Bread Street' nods to old European streets where bakeries were the heartbeat of the neighborhood — places where bread was made daily, by hand, with skill passed down through people," Tatiana says. "'Boys' reflects our energy behind the bakery: a fun, tight-knit, and hardworking crew of bakers."

    Also, when they were teenagers, the Backstreet Boys were popular.

    "We used to know those songs by heart, but without knowing a thing about what the words said," she says. "We liked the idea of giving the name a little pop-culture wink — kind of where old-world bread meets modern spirit."

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