Food we plant in Fall
We
have two complete seasons for vegetable gardening in the Sacramento Valley!
September thru November are ideal for planting many leafy greens and root crops
for winter and spring harvest.
Bean
Broad or Fava -- Grown as cover crop and for edible
seeds (snap/green beans and drying beans are Grown in the summer).
Great for the soil! Deep roots break up clay, suppress
weeds, and add nitrogen. Fragrant flowers. Some people eat the beans; some
people are very allergic to them. Plant as late as December.
Beets
Grown for roots and greens. Suggested varieties: Detroit Dark Red, Early Wonder, Chioggia, Lutz's Greenleaf; Cylindra (elongated)
Beets are easy, very sweet, and store nicely in the
garden. Best results when planted early in the fall, but can be planted as late
as November, or in February.
Broccoli
Grown for immature flower heads. One of the easiest winter vegetables. Sept. plantings may give heads by early December. Later plantings 'head up' in February.
Romanesco is the pale green Italian heirloom. Broccoli raab is a related
species grown for greens and immature flower heads. Sprouting broccoli is
another variety grown just for the small immature flower heads.
Brussels Sprouts
Grown for lateral buds on flower stems. Tricky; needs a long season. After July may be too late! Aphids are a hassle to manage. Many people don't like the flavor due to a genetic characteristic which makes them sensitive to bitter compounds in the
sprouts; other people don't even taste that.
Cabbage
Grown for leaves.
Suggested varieties: Green Acre, Savoy
Short season types are easier here. Plant in Sept.or
early Oct. to give the heads time to form, harvest in February. Chinese cabbage
is a different species, takes more space but cultivation is the same.
Carrots
Grown for roots.
suggested varieties: Little Finger, Danvers Half-long, Chantenay; Orbit (round)
Shorter, stouter types best unless soil is very loose.
Very slow to germinate; pour boiling water over seed in a bowl, then sow it the
next day. Or plant with radish seeds; by the time you're harvesting the
radishes, the carrots are beginning to sprout.
Cauliflower
Grown for immature flower heads.
Suggested varieties: Early Snowball
More vulnerable to weather and pest problems than other
winter veg's. Slugs and aphids are a real nuisance, getting up in the
flowerhead as it develops.
Celeriac
Grown for enlarged stems.
Weird thickened stem that you steam or boil. Plant
early in fall to give it time to develop. Maybe buy one in the store first to
see if you like 'em?
Celery
Grown for leaf stems.
Not difficult, but strong-flavored in the home garden
since we don't blanch the heads.
Celtuce
Grown for enlarged stems.
Almost as weird as celeriac. Plant early in the fall
to give it time to develop.
Chard, Swiss
Grown for leaves and leaf stems.
Suggested varieties: Bright Lights, Rhubarb (red)
Pretty, easy, produces nearly year round. Cut back in
spring when weather gets warm to keep fresh foliage sprouting. If you just let
aphids go on them in summer, beneficial insects are attracted and help control
aphids elsewhere in the garden.
Chicory, Belgian endive
Grown for roots, leaves.
Suggested varieties: Magdeburg
Roots of this type are roasted and added to coffee
(mostly in Louisiana).Witloof chicory is Grown for the edible leaves, which are
an acquired taste; this one is grown in darkness in the last stages to produce
the fancy blanched Belgian endive. A wild relative grows as a weed in this
area, with pretty blue flowers and seeds which spread dandelion-like on the
wind.
Cilantro, coriander, Chinese parsley
Grown for leaves, used as
herb.
Tricky. Needs cool but not freezing weather; goes to
flower right away in spring and summer (seed is coriander). Best planted in
fall. Tastes like soap to many of us, due to a genetic quirk.
Collards
Grown for leaves.
Basically an open leaf-type of cabbage. Easy to grow; plant anytime late summer through winter, then harvest leaves from fall through
spring.
Corn Salad
Grown for salad greens.
One of those trendy greens people put in salads. Also
very ornamental for planting in mixed winter color bowls with pansies, kale.
Cresses
Grown for leaves.
True watercress grows on the edges of streams in
fresh, clean water and prefers consistently cool conditions. The other cresses
are Grown as substitutes. Garden cress is faster, easier than Upland cress.
Very fast, grows best in cool weather. Plant from seed in fall, harvest during
fall and winter. Used in salads and sandwiches.
Endive, Curly; Escarole
Grown for salad or cooked
greens.
These are Grown for leafy greens,similar to lettuce.
It's tricky to blanch them--you have to tie the outer leaves around the
interior and if the weather is wet the head will rot. But the leaves can be
used in soup,much like chard. Belgian endive is a kind of chicory grown for the
leaves.
Fennel, Florence
Grown for fleshy stems.
Slice thin in salads, or saute them. Easy to grow and
will reseed. Leaves are a food source for swallowtail caterpillars in spring.
Flowers draw beneficial insects.
Garlic
Grown for bulbs, used for seasoning.
Plant disease-free bulbs in fall. Push over foliage,
start watering less often in late spring. Harvest early summer.
Kale
Grown for leafy greens.
suggested varieties: Russian Red
Very productive, easy, and really good for you. Too
bad it tastes boring. Flavor is sweeter after we've had some frost. Plant
anytime in fall or winter. Chinese kale is a similar leafy vegetable, also very
easy to grow. Ornamental kale is also edible, though fibrous.
Kohlrabi
Grown for enlarged stems.
Weird cabbage relative with bulb-like stem, available
in green or purple. Sept. plantings may yield in Nov.; later plantings in Feb.
My dad loves this! The name means 'cabbage-turnip' in German.
Leeks
Grown for stems and leaves, used for seasoning
like onion.
Very easy. Can be perennial if you cut carefully,
leaving 1/2 above the ground, so that it resprouts. Reseeds if allowed to
flower.
Lettuce
Grown for leafy greens.
Suggested varieties: Bibb, Black-seeded Simpson,
Lollo Rossa, Prizehead, Romaine, Tom Thumb (cute!)
Plant all fall and winter; great in pots. Leaf types
most successful here; tight head types (Iceberg) will rot in overcast weather.
Mustard greens
Grown for leafy greens.
Very easy to grow. Allow them to reseed around your
veg garden and orchard, as the flower draw beneficial insects. Chinese mustard
and Cabbage mustard are similar and also easy to grow. Mizuna is Japanese
mustard, a fast-growing mustard with sweet, spicy flavor.
Onions
Grown for bulbs (and leaves) used as seasoning.
Suggested varieties: Stockton yellow, Stockton red,
Early California red, Fresno White, Red Torpedo, Walla Walla, among many others. We can grow most varieties of onions here.
Plant from bare-rooted seedlings (easiest) in Nov. - Dec., or from seed in early
fall. Plants grown from bulbs usually try to flower, leading to hollow bulbs.
Like nitrogen fertilizer in winter. Harvest May - June.
Onions, bunching
Grown for leaves used as seasoning.
suggested varieties: Welsh, Spanish
Easy to grow; multiply but don't form bulbs. Japanese
bunching onions are a type of multiplier onion like shallots, forming bulbs and
increasing freely, but mostly grown for the leaves.
Oyster plant, Salsify
Grown for roots, eaten cooked.
How did someone figure out this was edible? White
salsify and black salsify (scorzonera) form tap roots with mild oyster-like
flavor.
Pak-choi
Asian vegetable, Grown for cooked greens.
Very easy; harvest in just a few weeks from seed
planted in early fall, or in spring from seed planted in late fall.
Parsley Root
Grown for roots, eaten cooked, and leaves.
Another weird one: this is a parsley that is Grown for
the root, which looks like a white fleshy carrot. The leaves are edible, too.
Parsnips
Grown for roots, eaten cooked.
Plant in early fall to give the roots time to develop.
Not very popular, but interesting sweet/nutty flavor. I sneak them into winter
stews.
Peas: Edible-pod, Sugar, Snow
Grown for green seed pods.
Suggested varieties: Oregon Sugar Pod II, Dwarf
Grey Sugar
Timing is key for all peas! Sept. to mid - Oct. is
best. Pre-germinate seed indoors if planting in late Oct.or Nov. Feb. may work
unless it gets hot early. Snow peas are the flat ones used in stir-fry.
Edible-pod (sugar) peas are eaten whole, shell and all, or can be shelled.
Peas: Shelling
Grown for edible seeds, eaten green.
Suggested varieties: Novella II, Maestro, Tall Telephone
The old-fashioned shelling peas..Most peas need some
light support. Novella is unique: leaves have all been replaced by tendrils,
making a wiry mound that resembles a tumbleweed. Very productive.
Potatoes
Grown for roots, eaten cooked.
Suggested varieties: Yukon Gold, Yellow Finn, Red La Soda, White, lots of others.
Easy, fun. Usually spring planted, but early fall
plantings can be successful. HomeGrown potatoes are sweeter than store-bought!
Plant in loose soil or raised beds, or stacked tires filled with soil. Water
regularly until they flower, then gradually less as the plants decline. You can
start poking around for potatoes anytime. Each start produces a couple of dozen
potatoes of varying sizes.
Radicchio
Grown for salad greens.
Suggested varieties: Giulio
Spicy, peppery flavor is not for everyone (bleccchh!).
Easy to grow in cool weather, from seed or starts. Very ornamental addition to
winter color bowls.
Radishes
Grown for roots, eaten raw.
Suggested varieties: Champion, Plum Purple, Sparkler
Easy, quick--ready in as little as a month from seed.
Pepperiness (from mustard oil) increases in warmer weather. Daikon radish is a
very large variety Grown for use in Asian cooking. It is also very easy, but
takes several weeks to develop. Plant Daikon in fall for best results.
Rutabagas
Grown for large root, eaten cooked or sometimes raw.
Need a long season; planting after July may be too late. My kids
loved these sliced raw when they were young. For some reason, college students
think this name is very funny. It is from the Swedish rotabagge; Scots call them 'neeps' or
just turnips, and carve them into jack-o'-lanterns. They call the other turnips
'white turnips'. Americans call them 'yellow turnips' and call the other
turnips 'turnips'.
Spinach
Grown for leafy greens.
Suggested varieties: Bloomsdale, Olympia, Tyee
True spinach is Grown in fall or early spring. Very easy,
just plant seed or sprouts and harvest the outer leaves any time. New Zealand
and Malabar spinaches are warm season plants grown as substitutes.
Turnips
Grown for roots, eaten cooked or occasionally raw.
Regular turnips take 10 - 12 weeks to form, so they need to be planted by early
September for your Thanksgiving dinner! Shogoin is an Asian turnip that is very
fast, easy, with a kind of peppery flavor and nice texture.
Click here for a planting chart!
A harvest of winter vegetables! All can be planted
in fall for cool season harvest.
Clockwise from bottom left: beets, baby pak choi,
kohlrabi, parsnips, radishes, carrots, radicchio. Center: celeriac.
Click here for more information about cool season vegetables.
See also Winter vegetables
© 2008 Don Shor, Redwood Barn Nursery, Inc., 1607 Fifth Street, Davis, Ca 95616
www.redwoodbarn.com
Feel free to copy and distribute this article with attribution to this author.
Click here for Don's other Davis Enterprise articles