That sounds like one of those viral “magic spoon” plant tips—and while it can help sometimes, it’s not a universal fix.
Most of these posts are referring to adding something simple like sugar, baking soda, coffee grounds, or fertilizer directly to the soil. The results you saw likely came from giving the plant a missing nutrient, not the specific “1 tablespoon” itself.
🌿 What it usually is (and what actually helps)
🥄 1. Sugar (sometimes suggested)
- Can give a temporary energy boost to soil microbes
- ❌ But too much can attract pests and harm roots
☕ 2. Coffee grounds
- Add organic matter and a bit of nitrogen
- Good for some plants, but not all
🧂 3. Baking soda (for flowering plants)
- Sometimes used to encourage blooms
- ❌ Overuse can damage soil balance
🌱 4. Actual fertilizer (most likely reason it worked)
- Balanced nutrients = healthier plant + more blooms
- This is usually the real reason behind success
💡 Why your plant bloomed again
- It was likely lacking nutrients
- The “1 tablespoon” acted as a boost
- Combined with proper light and watering, it triggered flowering
⚠️ Be careful
- Random kitchen ingredients can harm plants if overused
- Different plants need different nutrients
- What works once may not work long-term
✅ Better approach
- Use a balanced liquid fertilizer every 2–4 weeks
- Ensure:
- Enough light ☀️
- Proper watering 💧
- Good drainage
🌸 Bottom line
It’s not really a “magic tablespoon”—your plant just needed the right conditions and a nutrient boost.
If you tell me what plant you have, I can give you the exact feeding method to keep it blooming consistently 👍