Free Shipping on Orders $35+

Login
Amazon American Express Apple Pay Diners Club Discover Google Pay Mastercard PayPal Shop Pay Venmo Visa
Non-GMO
Supports Family Farms
Heirloom

Fagiolini dell’occhio Yardlong Bean (Cowpea)

Quick Facts:

  • Italian yard long bean grown since 1950's
  • Heavy-yielding pole-type plants
  • Can be used similar to green beans
  • Sought-after for authentic Italian cuisine
  • 75 days to harvest

View full description

Quantity: Packet (25 Seeds)

shipping estimated time of arrival Get it between Monday March 17th - Wednesday March 19th

Fagiolini dell’occhio Yardlong Bean (Cowpea)

More about Fagiolini dell’occhio

Vigna unguiculata

Heirloom Italian yardlong bean grown since at least the late 1950's by Vasco Marconi, proprietor of the famous Villa Marconi Ristorante in Chicago.  Seed for the variety was maintained since the late 1990's by Patti Trotsky, family friend and longtime waitress at the restaurant, until it was donated to Seed Savers Exchange in 2013.   Vigorous, vining plants produce heavy yields of thin green beans of up to 2 feet in length.  Long, tender pods are typically cooked as fresh green beans, sautéed in olive oil and seasoned with garlic, and sometimes anchovies.  Requires trellising.  Harvests begin approximately 75 days after sowing.  Each packet contains a minimum of 25 seeds.

Vigna unguiculata

Heirloom Italian yardlong bean grown since at least the late 1950's by Vasco Marconi, proprietor of the famous Villa Marconi Ristorante in Chicago.  Seed for the variety was maintained since the late 1990's by Patti Trotsky, family friend and longtime waitress at the restaurant, until it was donated to Seed Savers Exchange in 2013.   Vigorous, vining plants produce heavy yields of thin green beans of up to 2 feet in length.  Long, tender pods are typically... read more

read less

Vigna unguiculata

Heirloom Italian yardlong bean grown since at least the late 1950's by Vasco Marconi, proprietor of the famous Villa Marconi Ristorante in Chicago.  Seed for the variety was maintained since the late 1990's by Patti Trotsky, family friend and longtime waitress at the restaurant, until it was donated to Seed Savers Exchange in 2013.   Vigorous, vining plants produce heavy yields of thin green beans of up to 2 feet in length.  Long, tender pods are typically cooked as fresh green beans, sautéed in olive oil and seasoned with garlic, and sometimes anchovies.  Requires trellising.  Harvests begin approximately 75 days after sowing.  Each packet contains a minimum of 25 seeds.

Gardener holding seedlings
person holding seedlings

How to Grow Cowpeas

Girl holding cowpeas

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
100%
(1)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
P
Paul Carmignani
Fagiolini dell’occhio - Planted and Germinated and currently 6" tall

I live in Florida, so we have two planting seasons. I purchased these seeds because when I was a child, my grandfather always grew this type of bean and we as a family loved them, eaten like green beans. My family was a part of the Chicago Italian American community. I was shocked to find these and delighted to give this a try.

I sowed these seeds 2 weeks ago with the goal of a late November / December harvest. The seeds arrived quickly. The package stated there were 25 seeds and there were 25 seeds, but they were all not equal in my opinion. 15 of them were reasonably sized and looked great, and the other 10 were far smaller and wrinkled. 2 of these 10 were dried out and split. I do not feel I received 25 "good seeds". In my opinion, I received 15 good seeds and the remaining 10 were poor.

I planted 18 seeds in a controlled manner using some inoculant. Of the 18 seeds, 13 germinated and have grown well. Note that I planted the 18 best looking ones to start. At the same time, I also planted 12 Jung Seeds - Bush Green Beans Blue Lake 274's from my 2023 package and 12 seeds I dried and harvested from last years Jung Blue Lake 274 crop. I had a 24 out of 24 germination rate with these seeds. Same planting method, same soil.

Today, I planted 5 more of these Fagiolini dell’occhio seeds to fill the holes where germination did not occur. For each hole, I dug out the dirt and discarded elsewhere and filled the small hole with new fresh dirt and some inoculant to give these seeds the best chance in germinating. I used 5 of the remaining seeds from the package albeit that they were smaller and a little shriveled. I'm not holding out hope, but we will see.

That's all to report now. If I'm given the opportunity, I will report on how they grew and how the harvest went.

Thank you so much for your review, Paul. We sincerely appreciate the feedback. While we aim to overfill all of our packets by 10%, we do use a machine to fill them so it is possible that there was an error when your packet was filled. We apologize for that and will be in touch about a refund or replacement. As for the germination, we are showing this variety as having tested at 85% in its most recent test. These tests are performed using a random, representative sample of the lot without any selection for size or perceived quality. It's important to note that while cowpeas like Fagiolini and beans like Blue Lake 274 are both legumes, they belong to different genera and have somewhat different germination preferences, so it is possible to get varying results when testing them under the same conditions.

Search

Top suggestions