Blanching helps to eliminate a bitter taste in celery. It coincidentally results in a pale green color. You can use almost anything that will wrap around the stalks and keep out light: paper such as brown paper bags (secure with old nylon stockings, string, vegetable wires—you know: the paper-coated wire sometimes used on supermarket lettuces), half-gallon milk cartons (tops and bottoms cut out), soil (pile dry soil around the stalks about one-third of the way up the stalks; this might be easier if you grow it in trenches; note too that soil, especially if it gets wet, could lead to rot). Whatever you use, leave the leaves exposed to sunlight. Salinas farmers might have other ideas…we hope they share them!
Blanching helps to eliminate a bitter taste in celery. It coincidentally results in a pale green color. You can use almost anything that will wrap around the stalks and keep out light: paper such as brown paper bags (secure with old nylon stockings, string, vegetable wires—you know: the paper-coated wire sometimes used on supermarket lettuces), half-gallon milk cartons (tops and bottoms cut out), soil (pile dry soil around the stalks about one-third of the way up the stalks; this might be easier if you grow it in trenches; note too that soil, especially if it gets wet, could lead to rot). Whatever you use, leave the leaves exposed to sunlight. Salinas farmers might have other ideas…we hope they share them!