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Turnips

Turnips are cool-weather vegetables that can be grown both in spring and fall, avoiding the hot summer months. They mature very rapidly and you can enjoy both the greens and the roots. Try this ancient root vegetable that's been grown for over 3,000 years! We'll show you how to plant, grow, and harvest turnips this season.

About Turnips

An autumn crop, seeded in late summer, is usually sweeter and more tender than a spring crop—and pests are less of a problem. What's wonderful about turnips is that they germinate in only a few days. Within a month, you can enjoy their bright greens, and within a second month (60 to 90 days), you can eat the swollen roots.

Turnips can be eaten raw, baked, boiled, roasted, or mashed. Prepare turnips as you would carrots. Or, try them as an alternative to potatoes; we enjoy a turnip gratin.

Planting

When to Plant Turnips

Preparing the Site

How to Plant Turnips

Care

How to Grow Turnips


Avoid Bolting

Turnips are hardy biennials, even though we treat them as annuals. They naturally flower and go to seed (bolt) in the second year. Bolting in the first year could be due to stress, such as caused by extreme temperatures (cold or hot) or lack of nutrients or water. Such stresses can also result in little or no root growth, a root that grows above ground, or greens only.

Be sure to pick turnips before temperatures get into the 80s to avoid bolting.

Pests/Diseases

Click on links for more information about the relevant pest:

Recommended Varieties

Many turnips are grown not for the root itself but for the turnip greens, which can be cooked or used raw in salads. Younger turnip greens will not be as bitter as mature leaves. If you are growing turnips primarily for their greens, most any turnip variety will do.

For roots, try these . . .

Harvest/Storage

How to Harvest Turnips

How to Store Turnips

Wit and Wisdom Recipes Turnip Soup Eastham Turnip Pie Cooking Notes

If you're wondering how to cook turnips, you're not alone. Both the turnip greens and roots are very nutritious. Turnip roots should generally be peeled and sliced before using them. Both turnip roots and turnip greens are usually cooked though they can be eaten raw if young and tender.


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Planting