Runner Bean Seed
Runner beans are a different species, & are the classic UK late-summer crop – they build up foliage at start of summer and then set beans when the temperatures drop.
Sowing Information
Can be sown direct, but best started in small pots or large modules under cover to avoid mice stealing them!
Beware, they don't make pods in hot conditions, so not a good crop for a polytunnel/greenhouse unless you're in a colder part of the country.
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Greek Gigantes
Here we have a very special and rare runner bean from the mountains of northern Greece, which has been bred over hundreds of years for the enormous buttery seeds, rather than being bred for eating the pods as we are used to. The seeds are alarmingly large, being about twice the size of the Czar above, which itself is a pretty big-seeded variety amongst normal runner beans. They are fantastic in soups and stews, and the staple ingredient in delicious dishes such as:
- gigantes in savoury tomato sauce
- gigantes dressed with lemon juice, oregano, olive oil, & salt, in a salad
- gigantes paté (a bit like hummus) made with garlic and olive oil
You can find loads more mouth-watering recipes on the internet or in greek cookbooks by searching for 'gigantes beans'. You grow them up canes just like a normal runner bean (so easy if you are used to that), but leave the pods to go brown and papery, then shell out and collect the seeds. They can be dried for storage or used fresh. They swell up even bigger when cooked. Now you might think they look like lima beans - but this is a common misconception; they really are true runner beans, which of course are much easier to grow. And the mountainous areas in the far north of where they are from are quite wet and cold at night, so we think they should do well in many parts of the UK. They certainly grow well for us here in west Wales, and are extremely tasty.
Let us know how they do for you, we'd also love your favourite recipes / cooking suggestions.
Rhondda Black
We are very pleased to be able to offer this old heirloom, probably an exhibition variety, from South Wales. It has been a 4 year project by Kate to bulk this up from a handful of seeds. Beautiful black seeds on very large plants, it was originally given to Adam Alexander by a gentleman in the audience when he gave a talk in the Rhondda valley.
Old traditional runner bean from the Valleys. Very rare, so just 14 huge seeds in a packet.


The Czar
This UK variety of runner bean is hugely productive. It grows really tall and bears lots of white flowers that set long pods.
We particularly like Czar because as well as vast numbers of nice flat green pods for normal use fresh, it will also later make fat white seeds that are very easy to dry and shell out of their pods.
The dry beans can be stored and boiled just like butter beans - we always set aside a few plants for dry bean production as they are so delicious cooked that way. But we eat lots of fresh beans each year too in the normal fashion. It makes so many!
Butterbean type, with both pods and seeds great for cooking.







