Grow your own dinner with these six heat-beating garden veggies

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Peppers are wonderfully heat resistant. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 03 June 2018
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Grow your own dinner with these six heat-beating garden veggies

  • As the Gulf's temperatures soar, you could be surprised to learn you can still grow your own food
  • Jump on the grow-your-own bandwagon and beat the heat with these hardy vegetables

DUBAI: As the international trend of growing your own vegetables heats up, as do the summer temperatures in the Gulf. However, if you wish to cut costs by feeding your family organically grown veggies, fear not for you too can jump on the grow-your-own bandwagon and beat the heat with these hardy options.

Eggplants

Eggplants will grow well when planted through June and are best adapted to high heat in a not-too-foggy environment. They do, however, need a significant amount of nitrogen so you will have to use additional fertilizer and ensure the seedlings get plenty of sun. If you’re short on space, try planting the seedlings alongside tomatoes, which also do well in sunny, hot environments.

Beans

An amazing and healthy variety of beans can be produced all summer long, making for the perfect addition to salads or side dishes. The long list includes pinto, kidney and cannellini beans, snap beans or string beans and green beans, soybeans, edamame, asparagus and yard-long beans.

Cucumbers and sweet corn

Corn is one of the best companion plants for cucumber. The tall stalks of sunflowers help shade cucumber plants in the hot summer sun and both can be grown in June, making for a great two-in-one option if you are short on space.

Peppers

Make sure you plant your peppers in a bed that receives sunlight all day long. The soil should be well-drained and the peppers should be planted a minimum of 30 centimeters apart. Most sweet peppers mature in 60-90 days, while hot peppers can take up to 150 days to mature.

Pumpkins and squash

These hearty soup, stew and side dish options are ideal for soaring summer temperatures, especially if you go for Moschata-type summer squashes that need nighttime temperatures of more than 15 degrees Celsius to grow well (that’s a breeze in our corner of the world).

Okra

The drought-tolerant vegetable will grow well alongside melons, cucumbers, sweet peppers or eggplant, but make sure to go for heirloom varieties of okra with deeper root systems. The far-reaching roots allow the vegetables to boast improved drought and heat tolerance qualities.


Producer Zainab Azizi hopes ‘Send Help’ will be a conversation starter

Updated 31 January 2026
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Producer Zainab Azizi hopes ‘Send Help’ will be a conversation starter

DUBAI: Afghan American film producer Zainab Azizi cannot wait for audiences to experience Sam Raimi’s new horror comedy “Send Help.”

In an interview with Arab News, the president at Raimi Productions kept returning throughout her interview to one central theme: the communal thrill of horror.

“I started watching horror from the age of six years old. So, it’s kind of ingrained in my brain to love it so much,” she said, before describing the formative ritual that still shapes her work: “What I loved about that was the experience of it, us cousins watching it with the lights off, holding hands, and just having a great time. And you know, as an adult, we experience that in the theater as well.”

Asked why she loves producing, Azizi was candid about the mix of creativity and competition that drives her. “I’m very competitive. So, my favorite part is getting the film sold,” she said. “I love developing stories and characters, and script, and my creative side gets really excited about that part, but what I get most excited about is when I bring it out to the marketplace, and then it becomes a bidding war, and that, to me, is when I know I’ve hit a home run.”

Azizi traced the origins of “Send Help” to a 2019 meeting with its writers. “In 2019 I met with the writers, Mark and Damien. I was a fan of their works. I’ve read many of their scripts and watched their films, and we hit it off, and we knew we wanted to make a movie together,” she said.

From their collaboration emerged a pitch built around “the story of Linda Little,” which they developed into “a full feature length pitch,” and then brought to Raimi. “We brought it to Sam Raimi to produce, and he loved it so much that he attached to direct it.”

On working with Raimi, Azizi praised his influence and the dynamic they share. “He is such a creative genius. So, it’s been an incredible mentorship. I learned so much from him,” she said, adding that their collaboration felt balanced: “We balance each other really well, because I have a lot of experience in packaging films and finding filmmakers, so I have a lot of freedom in the types of projects that I get to make.”

When asked what she hopes audiences will take from “Send Help,” Azizi returned to the communal aftermath that first drew her to horror: “I love the experience, the theatrical experience. I think when people watch the film, they take away so many different things. ... what I love from my experience on this film is, especially during test screenings, is after the film ... people are still thinking about it. Everybody has different opinions and outlooks on it. And I love that conversation piece of the film.”