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Chocolate Gardening

Chocolate Gardening

You all know how much I love chocolate. I couldn't resist posting this from HGTV.

Chocolate Garden
by Marie Hofer, Gardening editor, HGTV.com

There can be a world of chocolate in your garden. I'm not talking about the plants that look milky brown and have chocolate in the name--'Chocolate Ruffles' heuchera (brown foliage) or the 'Chocolate Soldier' columbine (brown flowers) or even 'Chocolate Chip' ajuga (new leaves are brown). No, we're talking about walking through the garden and smelling chocolate. A sniff of the plants below can be very satisfying. Unfortunately though, if aroma makes you hungry, you'll need to carry a chocolate bar with you. The only two of these that are edible (the geranium and the mint) have only the vaguest of chocolaty flavors.

Chocolate flower (Berlandiera lyrata). The chocolaty aroma that wafts from these dark-eyed daisies is best in the morning. A wildflower that's native to the Southwest, the chocolate flower thrives on minimal water. In moist, humid climates, try planting in containers; that will also allow you to place the plant where you can best appreciate its fragrance. This hardy perennial is short-lived but freely reseeds.

Chocolate-mint geranium (Pelargonium tomentosum 'Chocolate Mint'). Scented geraniums come in apple, pineapple, orange and even pink champagne, so obviously a chocolate-mint was needed too. The foliage, not the flowers, carry the fragrance. Enjoy as an annual during the growing season and then bring inside for the winter.

Chocolate mint (Mentha x piperita 'Chocolate Mint'). Call the fragrance on this mint nine parts mint to one part chocolate. Like others in its family, this mint spreads aggressively via rhizomes. If you want to keep it inbounds, plant in containers or install ground barriers. Mint is tolerant of almost any soil, but in moist, rich soil, growth will be rampant.

Chocolate cosmos (Cosmos atrosanguineus). Velvety, black-maroon flowers give off a wonderful chocolate scent from midsummer to fall. This plant needs full sun and well-drained soil with even moisture. In spring, plant tubers three feet apart in full sun. In the fall, treat as you would a dahlia; lift and store for the winter. Enjoy the aroma but don't eat: this plant is toxic.

Not on the list:
Somehow the sweet shrub (Calycanthus floridus) has gained the reputation for having a chocolate aroma. Not so. The brown-maroon flowers of the sweetshrub have a lovely fragrance, but it's fruity (or sometimes spicy). The other common names for this large deciduous shrub: strawberry bush, spicebush and Carolina allspice.

Carol7
Thanks for posting this. I have a sweet shrub, in this area some also call it Sweet Betsy, and I've had a couple of people look at me funny when I said it smelled like strawberry bubblegum instead of a spicy smell. I wonder what determines if it has a fruity or spicy scent? The soil maybe?

Elena, are you going to start a new garden bed that smells like chocolate now? Surprised)
I have the sweet shrub already (more of a spicy smell to mine)and also the chocolate mint. I wonder if I am smelling cholocate all the time I am working if I will want to gorge on chocolate all day???? I wouldn't mind having a few more of the chocolate plants but not enough to pay big bucks. Gotta save those for more chocolate. LOL!

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