We are franker towards others than towards ourselves.
- Friedrich Nietzsche
- Friedrich Nietzsche
Growing food in an urban setting?
you can also grow all kinds of kitchen herbs (they work great in the window) basil, parsley, oregano, thyme, mint etc..they are easy growers and dont need a LOT of attention. Tomatoes indoors is be hard but very doable ..i would stick to plum or cherry tomatoes other larger varities plants will simply grow too large..tomatoes though are used to a certain vibration (from the buzzing bees some poeple have great luck indoors others not so much) tomato plant you will have to self pollinate when it flowers., garlic and onions can be grown in 5 gallon pots easily 
this is a great tomato resource http://www.tomatodirt.com/grow-indoor-tomatoes.html maybe Marjorie can do a web video about her thoughts..
Heather

this is a great tomato resource http://www.tomatodirt.com/grow-indoor-tomatoes.html maybe Marjorie can do a web video about her thoughts..
Heather
Comments
Fred from Worcestershire, England.
I don't know anything about your building. But SOME urban landlords will allow their tenants to have a roof-top garden. It might be worth asking. :-) Being eco-conscious is currently trendy, so having a green-roof is a potential up-sell for the building.
If you are strictly indoors, then herbs and greens will work well with window-sun.
If you want full sun fruiting plants such as peppers and tomatoes, then you will need more light. LED grow lights are cheap.
If you like gadgets, I have friends who live in apartments and love their AeroGarden. But I prefer organic and sustainable. ;-)
M
Things I learned living in a city.
- Land is more available than you realize. Allotments, friends with backyard space. Libraries lending seeds (you grow, save the seeds, give back some to the library and repeat next year - also free classes for growing stuff) and they sometimes lend land to grow on.
- Growing things in pots on a balcony is a great place to start. Observing what you grow will teach you more than any book, video or website. Of course books, videos and websites help too. Tomatoes would be a great plant to start with as they love the heat of the city.
- almost anything can become a pot for growing something in. An old tin can with a hole in the bottom. I even grew lemon trees in wine bottles but they were a bit difficult to transplant when they got rootbound.
My thoughts, start growing. Grow anything. If you have a tomato in the fridge, save the seeds from it and then grow them.