Fresh Dinosaur Kale Chips

Kale grew in the garden over our very short Florida winter. Now the heat is already here, so I am using the leaves and hoping for seed pods.

Kale

Last fall I planted organic kale seeds. Kale is a vegetable that does well in cold weather.

kale seeds organic

Now that “winter” is here, I am picking kale leaves to make chips. My leaves are not very big, but hot weather is already here, so I need to make use of the kale.

Kale
Dinosaur Kale

I eat kale because it is healthy and not necessarily because I love it. The two ways I use kale are either blended up for a smoothie, or baked in the oven to make chips.

On this day, I made chips.

garden kale
Kale for chips

Kale chips are very easy to make. Cut the leaves, wash, pat to dry a little, drizzle olive oil over the leaves. Use your hands to rub the oil all over the leaves and then place them on a sheet for baking.

Bake for a short time, checking often, and moving them / turning over as needed. Oven not too hot – I think around 325? Once they crisp up, they are done. Add salt and eat!

kale chips
In the process of making kale chips

I’m waiting for my kale plants to give me some seeds to use for next year. I’m not sure how that happens, so I am watching for a flower to form. Apparently then there should be seed pods.

My dill from seeds also did quite well. I ended up with more dill than I have room for in the garden. The black swallowtail butterfly loved it to and deposited her eggs everywhere. I had loads of caterpillars, but they all ended up being food for the cardinals! Such is life.


Unknown's avatar

Author: Pam

New England native, Florida resident. Blogging about boating, beach-combing, gardening, camping, and knitting. Work for Zazzle as a designer since 2008.

2 thoughts on “Fresh Dinosaur Kale Chips”

  1. You probably won’t get seed ‘pods’ but they might go to flower – usually
    yellow, and then to seed but you probably need to allow one plant to do
    that instead of constantly picking it – at least that is what happens
    with brassicas like Kale here in New Zealand! But they might be a
    different ‘breed’!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yes, I need to leave the plant alone for the flowers to form and then the pods. I’m going to try it, but already it is so muggy here! It’s all an experiment. Good to hear from you!

      Like

Leave a reply to Pam Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.