Description
Imagine growing flowers that are as breathtaking to admire as they are delicious to taste.
Abutilon pictum, the Redvein Abutilon, is a subtropical marvel native to southern Brazil, Argentina, and Paraguay. The plant is most famous for its showy, bell-shaped flowers that droop downwards like Chinese lanterns, typically yellow or orange with distinctive dark red or purple veins. The specific epithet pictum derives from the Latin meaning “painted,” alluding to the striking dark red veining—each flower looks like a miniature work of art suspended from the branch.
What makes this plant truly exceptional is its culinary magic. The flowers are edible, raw or cooked, with the sweet flavor increasing the longer the bloom is open. The flowers continuously produce nectar during their open period, making them progressively sweeter the longer they stay open, and their sweetness is most pronounced when grown indoors where pollinators do not consume the nectar. Harvest them at peak sweetness to garnish desserts, toss into salads, or candy them whole. This is ornamental gardening that rewards you with flavor.
Abutilon pictum is cultivated as a popular ornamental plant for use in gardens in subtropical and warm temperate climates, and is also planted in containers or pots, on patios and balconies outdoors, or as a winter house plant. The flowers attract a variety of pollinators, including native bees and hummingbirds, so you’re also building a living ecosystem. It blooms from April to September, and longer in warmer subtropical areas—a generous season of color and harvests.
Cultivation is straightforward. The plant can grow in light shade or full sun and requires moist soil, preferring fertile sandy, loamy, or well-drained clay soils. Abutilons bloom freely provided they receive 6-8 hours of direct sun, with a south-facing window being usually ideal. Abutilon plants bloom the first year when grown from seed, so you won’t wait long to see those magical bells unfurl. Flowering maple care in the garden is relatively uninvolved; the plant likes moist soil but should never become soggy or waterlogged. Container growers in cooler zones can simply move their plants indoors before frost.
Grow Abutilon pictum from seed and unlock a plant that is equal parts ornamental treasure and edible delicacy—a shrub that blurs the line between garden and kitchen, between pure beauty and pure pleasure.













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