Family Owned Since 1979
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CUBE OF BUTTER

CUBE OF BUTTER

Product Description:

Cucurbita pepo 50 days. These lemon yellow, straightneck squash are succulent and delicious with creamy white flesh. The uniform, cylindrical fruit can be picked young as baby-sized squash, or allowed to reach up to 10 inches while retaining all its irresistible, high-quality flavor. Low growing, open bush-habit plants yield heavy harvests.
  • Key Features:

SEED

TRANSPLANT

$4.95

$4.95

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Customer Reviews

Based on 12 reviews
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(10)
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17%
(2)
J
Janet
Amazing taste & high yield

Always have as many of these planted as I do green zucchini. Pick them at about six inches long at the most. They are great in any dish with green zucchini and grade them up for zucchini bread & for freeze drying. Sweet, great texture. Super producer. This will be the seventh year I will be starting them again.

J
Janet P.
Cubes of Butter the best of any yellow squash

I have tried several different yellow squash, but nothing as good tasting as Cubes of Butter. I start my seeds in a greenhouse in April. Everyone came up and this year I have a bumper crop of squash this year as I have come to expect from Territorial seeds. Thank you

C
Clark R.
Great plants and easy to grow

These arrived and I was concerned that they did not look like they would survive. However, once I planted them with some organic fertilizer and watered daily, it took almost a month, but they then went into overdrive. Both plants are growing like crazy, and you definitely need at least feet of space between them.

L
Lynne C.
Amazing! Best yellow squash ever!

I have been gardening for decades and this is my absolute favorite. I will only plant Cube of Butter from now on. The squash is so beautiful with a pale yellow butter color. The taste is superior to any other yellow squash I have tried. Not seedy or mushy. The plant itself is so healthy and grew so fast from the small plant I received. It started producing squash so early. It is very prolific. Much more so than other straight or crookneck that I have grown. I am sold on this plant and will be preordering early!

Soil Temp for Germ 65–85°F
Seed Depth 1–1 ½"
Seed Spacing 3–4/hill
Days to Emergence 5–10
Thin Plants to 1–2/hill
Row Spacing 3–6'
Fertilizer Needs Medium
Minimum Germination 75%
Seeds per Gram See below
Seed Life 3–4 years

Cucurbita spp. In the diverse family of squash are true nutritional powerhouses, encompassing a wide array of forms, flavors, colorations, and culinary applications. Squash are rich in the carotenoids necessary for vitamin A production and boast a wide complement of amino acids. While starchy, most of the carbohydrates in the fruit come from special polysaccharides, pectins, which have exhibited strong antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anti-diabetic, insulin-regulating properties.

Days to maturity are from date of direct seeding.

Culture
• Fertile, well-drained soil gives best results
• Squash is a warm season crop, so avoid planting too early; raised beds and plastic mulch help keep roots warm
• Squash are monoecious (bearing separate male and female flowers on the same plant) and require insect pollination
• Poor fruit set is often the result of inadequate pollination; plant bee attractant flowers

Direct Sowing
• Plant after frost danger when soil warms to 65°F
• Work in shovelful of compost and 1/2 cup TSC's Complete fertilizer into hill
• Keep soil evenly moist but not wet as too much moisture causes seed to rot
• Bush varieties: sow 3-4 feet apart
• Vining varieties: sow 4-6 feet apart

Transplanting
• Start indoors 3-4 weeks prior to anticipated transplant date in 4 inch pots
• Work in shovelful of compost and 1/2 cup TSC's Complete fertilizer into hill
• Transplant carefully as to not disturb roots

Insects & Diseases
• Common insects: Spotted and striped cucumber beetles, vine borers and squash bugs
• Insect control: Row covers and/or apply Pyrethrin
• Moschata species are resistant to vine borer
• Common diseases: See chart below; diseases vary by region
• Disease prevention: 3-4 year crop rotation, and fungicide applications

Harvest & Storage
• Summer squash: Harvest regularly when fruits are young to keep plants productive
• Winter squash: Leave on vine until fully mature, rinds should be firm
• When winter squash is mature cut stem leaving 2-4 inches remaining, gently wash in sanitizing solution; 10 parts water to 1 part bleach
• For best results move winter squash to a warm dry area 80-90°F to cure; see each type (below) for curing requirements
• Store winter squash at 50-60°F with 50-75% relative humidity and good air circulation

Curing Requirements
• Acorn: Curing not required; Stores 2-3 months
• Buttercup: Cure 10-14 days; Store 1-2 months for best flavor; Will keep 4-6 months
• Butternut: Cure 10-14 days; Store 1-2 months for best flavor; Will keep 4-6 months
• Delicata: Curing not required; Stores 2-3 months
• Hubbard: Cure 10-14 days; Store 1-2 months for best flavor; Will keep 4-6 months
• Kabocha: Cure 10–14 days; Store 1–2 months for best flavor; Will keep 4–6 months
• Mini-Hubbard: Curing not required; Stores 2-3 months
• Spaghetti: Curing not required; Stores 2-3 months

Approximate seeds per gram
• Acorn, Butternut, & Delicata: 9-16
• Buttercup & Hubbard: 3-7
• Green, Gray Summer: 7–9
• Kabocha: 5–7
• Patty Pan: 7-10
• Romanesco: 4–5
• Spaghetti: 4-7
• Yellow Summer: 7-15
• Zucchini: 5-8


KEY TO SQUASH DISEASE RESISTANCE AND TOLERANCE

HR indicates high resistance.
IR indicates intermediate resistance.
CMV | Cucumber Mosaic Virus
PM | Powdery Mildew
PRV | Papaya Ringspot Virus
SLCV | Squash Leaf Curl Virus
WMV* | Watermelon Mosaic Virus
ZYMV | Zucchini Yellow Mosaic Virus
* Numbers indicate specific disease race.

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