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Garden Visit: Samin Nosrat’s Communal Courtyard Garden in Oakland

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Garden Visit: Samin Nosrat’s Communal Courtyard Garden in Oakland

January 9, 2026

Like many excellent chefs, Samin Nosrat is also a keen gardener. When she’s not recipe testing or cooking for friends or, as is often the case these days, traveling to promote her new cookbook Good Things, she can be found puttering around the courtyard garden that she shares with three other households in Oakland, CA. (I wrote about their unique communal living situation in the 2022 book Remodelista: The Low-Impact Home.) Every neighbor pitches in when it comes to gardening chores, “but I tend to drive the bus,” she admits.

“I’ve been gardening avidly for about 15 years now. My interest in it grew out of both my cooking career and my love of flowers and friendships with Sarah Ryhanen [of Saipua] and [floral designer] Nicolette Owen. And over the years, as I’ve spent more time in the garden, it’s occurred to me that many of my maternal ancestors were also extraordinary gardeners,” she shares.

“For many years I was hesitant to start gardening because I was a renter and felt like, ‘What’s the point? I’ll have to leave everything behind when I move!’  Then, a master gardener taught me that gardening’s real takeaway is the experience, and that even the best gardeners have tons and tons of failures. This has been a great gift to me, as a recovering production-oriented perfectionist. I love that gardening gives me a daily opportunity to slow down and pay attention, to get my hands dirty, and to learn how to look at my surroundings.”

Below, Samin takes us on a tour of her courtyard garden, a place for gathering together and growing things. (Curious about her home kitchen? Head over to Remodelista for a peek.)

Photography by Aya Brackett.

The courtyard is where the neighbors come together for shared meals.
Above: The courtyard is where the neighbors come together for shared meals.
Above: “I don’t have much room in the front of my house and there is a lot of shade, too, so I took a maximalist approach and tried to pack in as much of a cottage garden here as I could,” she says.”Lots of moody oxalis, hellebores, and heuchera, as well as different types of ferns, including a beautiful bronze fern…. I’ve got chocolate akebia climbing the front, and added a clematis this year. There are a couple different abutilons, a few silver-leafed Japanese camellias, and some oak leaf hydrangea. I also always have Minoan lace and Dara Daucus planted, and then I add annuals throughout the year.”
&#8\2\20;I like to stick to peachy-apricoty blooms on one side of the garden and a dark, moody purpley-chocolatey palette on the other,&#8\2\2\1; says Samin of her flower beds. &#8\2\20;This year I went overboard and got a bazillion bulbs, which we are about to get into the ground after letting them chill in the fridge for a couple of months.&#8\2\2\1;
Above: “I like to stick to peachy-apricoty blooms on one side of the garden and a dark, moody purpley-chocolatey palette on the other,” says Samin of her flower beds. “This year I went overboard and got a bazillion bulbs, which we are about to get into the ground after letting them chill in the fridge for a couple of months.”
Samin and the neighbors recently replaced their old wood-framed vegetable beds with Vego&#8\2\16;s metal raised beds. &#8\2\20;They look quite pretty and keep the garden organized, but I’ll be honest—they save my back! Not having to crouch on your knees to tend to the plants really makes all the difference. Also, perhaps because they were newly filled with fresh soil this year, the plants grew like gangbusters. I’ve never seen anything like it!&#8\2\2\1;
Above: Samin and the neighbors recently replaced their old wood-framed vegetable beds with Vego‘s metal raised beds. “They look quite pretty and keep the garden organized, but I’ll be honest—they save my back! Not having to crouch on your knees to tend to the plants really makes all the difference. Also, perhaps because they were newly filled with fresh soil this year, the plants grew like gangbusters. I’ve never seen anything like it!”
In addition to this &#8\2\16;Black Beauty&#8\2\17; plum tree, there are fig, lemon, lime, kumquat, pomegranate, quince, persimmon, and apricot trees on the property. &#8\2\20;Plus, an INSANE passionfruit vine! My passionfruit vine is absolutely bananas after three years of growth—it’s over two stories tall and I have so much fruit that I call myself a &#8\2\16;passionfruit millionaire.&#8\2\17; &#8\2\20;
Above: In addition to this ‘Black Beauty’ plum tree, there are fig, lemon, lime, kumquat, pomegranate, quince, persimmon, and apricot trees on the property. “Plus, an INSANE passionfruit vine! My passionfruit vine is absolutely bananas after three years of growth—it’s over two stories tall and I have so much fruit that I call myself a ‘passionfruit millionaire.’ “
 Above. The vegetable garden, before adding Vego beds. This winter, Samin planted cool-weather crops like garlic, favas, and peas. &#8\2\20;Garlic is the best gift to myself. It&#8\2\17;s low-maintenance, and I can pull green garlic and scapes as it grows and then when it’s fully mature, I dry it out and braid it and have garlic for most of the rest of the year.&#8\2\2\1;
Above. The vegetable garden, before adding Vego beds. This winter, Samin planted cool-weather crops like garlic, favas, and peas. “Garlic is the best gift to myself. It’s low-maintenance, and I can pull green garlic and scapes as it grows and then when it’s fully mature, I dry it out and braid it and have garlic for most of the rest of the year.”
A summer harvest of cherry tomatoes. Samin amends the soil with compost of all kinds. &#8\2\20;One of the neighbors has a worm box, and we use the juice in the veg garden regularly. We also contribute to municipal compost, get compost from the City of Berkeley each spring, and I have a Mill that I use and sometimes supplement our compost with its food grounds.&#8\2\2\1;
Above: A summer harvest of cherry tomatoes. Samin amends the soil with compost of all kinds. “One of the neighbors has a worm box, and we use the juice in the veg garden regularly. We also contribute to municipal compost, get compost from the City of Berkeley each spring, and I have a Mill that I use and sometimes supplement our compost with its food grounds.”
With her trusty sidekick, Fava Bean.
Above: With her trusty sidekick, Fava Bean.

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