Winter does not have to mean an empty garden. Hardy vegetables like kale, spinach, mâche, and winter lettuce survive frost and even snow — and many taste better for it. This guide covers the best cold-hardy crops for winter, overwintering techniques, and how to grow vegetables indoors when outdoor conditions become too harsh.
Sarah Green
Horticulturist and garden expert with 15+ years of experience growing vegetables, herbs, and houseplants. Certified Master Gardener.
My Garden Journal
You Can Garden in Winter
Most people pack up the garden when temperatures drop. That is a mistake. Winter gardening is quieter than other seasons, but it is real — and some of the most satisfying crops of the year are harvested in January and February.
The key insight: winter gardening is not about fighting the cold. It is about working with it. A handful of crops actively prefer cold weather. Others can be protected with simple, inexpensive tools. And for everything else, winter is the ideal time to grow indoors under lights.
This guide covers all three strategies:
- Cold-hardy outdoor crops that survive frost and even light snow
- Season extension tools (cold frames, row covers, unheated polytunnels) that protect tender crops
- Indoor winter gardening — microgreens, herbs, and sprouting on windowsills and under grow lights
Quick Reference: Winter Gardening at a Glance
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Difficulty | Beginner |
| Outdoor option | Zones 6+ for cold-hardy greens; Zones 8+ for broader range |
| Indoor option | Any climate — windowsill or grow lights |
| Key advantage | Fewer pests, no bolt risk, improved flavors after frost |
| Main challenge | Short days = slow growth; plan for longer times to maturity |
| Best crops | Kale, spinach, mâche, winter lettuce, garlic, leeks, parsnips |
Understanding Winter Growing Conditions
Before choosing what to grow, understand what winter means for plants:
Day Length
In winter, day length drops to 8–10 hours in most of North America. This slows photosynthesis dramatically — plants that took 45 days to mature in summer may take 90 days in winter. The solution: plant early (September–October for outdoor crops) so plants reach harvestable size before the shortest days arrive, then harvest through winter.
Temperature Zones for Winter Gardening
| Zone | Winter Lows | What's Possible Outdoors |
|---|---|---|
| Zones 9–11 | Above 25°F (-4°C) | Nearly full range of cool-season crops |
| Zones 7–8 | 0–20°F (-18 to -7°C) | Cold-hardy greens with row cover; brassicas unprotected |
| Zones 5–6 | -10 to 0°F (-23 to -18°C) | Cold frames needed; kale, garlic, and leeks survive unprotected |
| Zones 3–4 | Below -10°F (-23°C) | Overwintering garlic/leeks only; rely on indoor growing |
The Frost-Sweetening Effect
Cold-hardy vegetables convert starches to sugars when temperatures drop. Kale, parsnips, Brussels sprouts, carrots left in the ground, and mâche all taste noticeably sweeter after frost exposure. This is the winter gardener's most rewarding discovery.
Strategy 1: Cold-Hardy Outdoor Crops
These vegetables can be grown outdoors through winter without additional protection in mild climates, or with simple covering in colder zones.
1. Kale — The Winter Workhorse
Kale is the most dependable winter vegetable in most climates. It survives temperatures down to about 10°F (-12°C) and becomes sweeter with each frost.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Plant by | September–October for winter harvest |
| Days to harvest | 55–65 days from transplant |
| Frost tolerance | Excellent — down to 10°F/-12°C |
| Harvest method | Pick outer leaves; center crown regrows |
| Best winter varieties | 'Winterbor' (curly), 'Red Russian' (mild), 'Lacinato/Dinosaur' |
Winter tip: Established kale plants that went in as fall transplants will continue producing all winter in Zones 6+. The leaves become tougher in cold; massage them lightly for salads or use them for soups and stews.
2. Mâche (Corn Salad) — The True Winter Salad
Mâche (Valerianella locusta) is perhaps the most cold-hardy salad green available. It survives temperatures down to 5°F (-15°C), grows slowly but steadily through winter, and produces tender, nutty-flavored rosettes that are perfect for winter salads.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Plant by | September–October (direct sow) |
| Days to harvest | 45–60 days, then harvests continue through winter |
| Frost tolerance | Outstanding — survives 5°F/-15°C |
| Harvest method | Cut entire rosette at base; leaves do not regrow significantly |
| Best varieties | 'Vit' (large, fast), 'Cavallo' (compact, very cold-hardy) |
Winter tip: Sow mâche more thickly than you think necessary — germination is slower in cool soil. It grows so slowly in winter that it stays fresh in the garden for weeks without bolting.
3. Spinach — Hardy and Overwintering
Spinach is more cold-hardy than most gardeners realize. Established plants survive temperatures down to about 15°F (-9°C), and certain varieties are specifically bred for overwintering.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Plant by | August–September for outdoor winter harvest; October–November for indoor |
| Days to harvest | 40–50 days from transplant |
| Frost tolerance | Good — down to 15°F/-9°C for established plants |
| Best winter varieties | 'Winter Bloomsdale', 'Tyee', 'Regiment' |
Overwintering trick: Sow spinach in September, let it reach 3–4 inches tall, then mulch heavily with straw (4–6 inches). In mild winters (Zones 6+), it will survive under the mulch and produce a very early spring flush of growth — often the first harvest of the new year.
4. Winter Lettuce (Under Cover)
Standard lettuce is not winter-hardy, but certain varieties bred for cold tolerance — combined with even minimal frost protection — produce through winter in most climates.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Plant by | September–October under cover |
| Days to harvest | 50–60 days; then cut-and-come-again harvesting |
| Frost protection needed | Yes — cold frame or 1.5 oz row cover |
| Best winter varieties | 'Winter Density' (romaine type), 'Marvel of Four Seasons', 'Arctic King' |
Key difference from summer lettuce: Winter lettuce grows very slowly in short days. Sow in early fall, establish the plants, and then harvest outer leaves through winter. They will not be growing quickly, but they will be alive and tasty.
5. Leeks — Long-Season Winter Staple
Leeks are one of the most cold-hardy alliums. Planted in spring or early summer, they reach full size by fall and can remain in the ground through most of winter, surviving temperatures down to about 10°F (-12°C) once established.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Start | Start from seed in February–March; transplant in May |
| Days to harvest | 100–120 days total; harvest October–March |
| Frost tolerance | Excellent — established leeks survive hard frost |
| Harvest method | Dig as needed through winter; they store in ground |
| Best winter varieties | 'King Richard' (fall), 'Bleu de Solaise' (winter), 'Giant Musselburgh' |
Tip: Winter leeks do not grow in winter — they simply persist and wait. This makes them one of the best "leave it and harvest as needed" crops for the cold season.
6. Parsnips — Improve with Frost
Parsnips are biennial root vegetables that take the whole growing season (May–October) to develop, but they reward patience spectacularly. Left in the ground through winter, parsnips convert starch to sugar with each freeze-thaw cycle, becoming among the sweetest vegetables in the garden.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Start | Direct sow in April–May |
| Days to maturity | 100–130 days; then harvest October–March |
| Frost tolerance | Outstanding — can stay in ground through hard frost |
| Harvest | Dig after first hard frost for best flavor; harvest through winter |
| Best varieties | 'Hollow Crown', 'Harris Model', 'Gladiator' |
Why beginners overlook parsnips: They are slow to germinate (14–21 days) and slow to grow. But once established, they take care of themselves and reward you with some of the most flavorful winter eating possible. Think of them as a very long-term investment.
7. Garlic — Winter's Dormant Treasure
Garlic is planted in fall (October–November), overwinters dormant underground, then grows vigorously in spring and is harvested in June–July. It is the ultimate bridge crop between seasons.
| Detail | Info |
|---|---|
| Plant | October–November, after first hard frost |
| Overwinters as | Dormant cloves, 2 inches deep |
| Frost tolerance | Designed for it — requires a cold period |
| Harvest | June–July of the following year |
| Best types for cold climates | Hardneck varieties: 'Rocambole', 'Porcelain', 'Purple Stripe' |
Planting tip: Plant individual cloves 6 inches apart, 2 inches deep, pointed end up. Mulch with 4–6 inches of straw after planting. In spring, remove mulch as shoots emerge. Feed with a balanced fertilizer when growth begins.
Strategy 2: Season Extension Tools
These inexpensive tools let you grow crops that would otherwise be killed by winter cold.
Cold Frames
A cold frame is a bottomless box with a transparent lid — an old window pane works perfectly. Placed over plants, it creates a microclimate 10–20°F warmer than outside air. On sunny winter days, temperatures inside can reach 50–60°F — warm enough for active plant growth.
DIY cold frame:
- Stack 2-inch lumber or straw bales in a rectangle
- Angle the back higher than the front (south-facing slope catches more sun)
- Lay old storm windows, polycarbonate panels, or heavy-duty greenhouse plastic on top
- Prop open on sunny days to prevent overheating
What to grow in a cold frame: Winter lettuce, spinach, mâche, arugula, claytonia, radishes, Asian greens, parsley
Temperature management: Vent the frame on any day above 45°F (7°C) — even in January, a sunny cold frame can overheat. A simple stick propped under the lid works fine.
Row Covers (Floating Row Cover)
Row cover is lightweight, breathable spun-bonded fabric that traps heat while letting light and water through. It is the most versatile winter gardening tool available.
| Weight | Cold Protection | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| 0.5–0.9 oz (lightweight) | To 28°F (-2°C) | Light frost protection; extends fall into early winter |
| 1.5 oz (medium) | To 24°F (-4°C) | Winter protection for greens in Zones 7+ |
| 2.0 oz (heavy) | To 20°F (-7°C) | Overwintering in Zones 5–6 with tunnels |
Simple tunnel: Bend wire hoops or lengths of PVC pipe over your garden bed, drape row cover over them, and secure the edges with soil, rocks, or clips. Done. Your plants are now significantly warmer than outside.
Strategy 3: Indoor Winter Gardening
When outdoor conditions are too harsh, bring the garden inside. Indoor winter growing is not a consolation prize — it produces some of the freshest, most nutritious food you can grow.
Microgreens — The Fastest Winter Crop
Microgreens are vegetable seedlings harvested just after the first true leaves appear (7–21 days from sowing). They contain concentrated nutrition and are among the easiest crops to grow indoors.
What you need:
- Shallow trays (1–2 inches deep)
- Good potting mix or coconut coir
- Seed — sunflower, pea, radish, broccoli, kale, basil, amaranth
- A bright window or basic grow light (even a cheap shop light works)
- Water and a spray bottle
How to grow:
- Fill tray with 1–1.5 inches of moistened potting mix
- Sprinkle seeds densely (touching is fine)
- Cover with a second empty tray to block light and hold moisture (for germination)
- Mist daily; remove cover once seeds sprout (2–5 days)
- Move to bright light or under grow lights
- Harvest with scissors when 1–2 inches tall (7–21 days)
Best microgreens for beginners: Sunflower (sweet, nutty), pea shoots (crisp, sweet), radish (spicy), broccoli (mild, very nutritious), kale (earthy)
Windowsill Herbs
A sunny south-facing window can support a productive herb garden all winter. The key is choosing herbs that tolerate lower light and indoor conditions.
| Herb | Light Needed | Winter Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Chives | 4+ hours | Very easy; cut and regrow repeatedly |
| Parsley | 4–6 hours | Slow to start from seed; transplant an outdoor plant in fall |
| Cilantro | 4–6 hours | Bolts in warmth; keep near a cool window |
| Mint | 3–4 hours | Very easy; bring in a pot from outdoors |
| Rosemary | 6+ hours | Needs good light; supplement with a grow light if needed |
| Basil | 8+ hours | Needs warmth AND light; most reliable under grow lights |
The "pot up in fall" trick: In September, before frost, dig up an herb plant from the garden (chives, parsley, mint, rosemary), pot it up, and bring it indoors. It will produce harvests all winter with minimal effort.
Sprouting — Zero Equipment Required
Sprouting (growing bean or seed sprouts) requires nothing more than a jar, a piece of cheesecloth or mesh, and water. Rinse seeds twice daily and harvest in 3–5 days.
Best sprouting seeds: Lentils, chickpeas, mung beans, radish, alfalfa, broccoli, sunflower
Nutritional bonus: Sprouting increases the vitamin C content of lentils by up to 6x and dramatically improves digestibility of legumes.
Step-by-Step: Plan Your Winter Garden
Step 1: Assess Your Climate
- Find your USDA hardiness zone
- Note your average first and last frost dates
- Determine which strategy fits your zone (outdoor cold-hardy, season extension, or indoor)
Step 2: Choose Your Crops
- Zones 8–11: Grow almost all cool-season vegetables outdoors through winter
- Zones 6–7: Focus on cold-hardy greens outdoors; use cold frames or row cover for lettuce and spinach
- Zones 4–5: Garlic, leeks, and kale outdoors; everything else under protection or indoors
- Zones 3 and below: Indoor growing (microgreens, sprouts, windowsill herbs); garlic and kale may survive with heavy mulch
Step 3: Time Your Planting
Count backward from your average first hard frost date:
| Crop | Weeks Before First Frost to Plant |
|---|---|
| Kale (transplant) | 8–10 weeks |
| Spinach (direct sow) | 6–8 weeks |
| Mâche (direct sow) | 6–8 weeks |
| Winter lettuce (under cover) | 6–8 weeks |
| Garlic (cloves) | 2–4 weeks after first frost |
| Leeks | Start indoors in February |
| Parsnips | Previous spring (April–May) |
Step 4: Set Up Your Infrastructure
Before winter sets in:
- Build or purchase a cold frame
- Buy row cover in the weight appropriate for your zone
- Set up an indoor growing station (a shelf near a bright window or with a grow light)
Step 5: Harvest Through Winter
Winter harvesting is different from summer harvesting. With cold-hardy crops, you are not racing against heat or bolting. Plants grow very slowly in short days, so harvest frequently but lightly — take outer leaves rather than entire plants, and let the core regrow.
Transitioning to Spring
A winter garden does not end — it transitions. Here is what happens:
February: Kale plants that survived winter begin sending up new growth as days lengthen. Garlic shoots emerge. Overwintered spinach starts growing again.
March: Outdoor winter crops begin growing more actively. Start leeks, onions, and tomatoes from seed indoors. Begin hardening off microgreens varieties to outside if temperatures allow.
April: Transition to spring planting mode. The cold-hardy crops from winter (kale, spinach, leeks) are still producing. First outdoor sowing of peas, carrots, and lettuce begins.
The year-round vegetable gardener does not have a season — they have a continuous cycle of overlapping crops, each occupying its ideal climate window.
FAQ
What vegetables can you grow in winter?
The best vegetables for winter gardening are cold-hardy crops that tolerate frost: kale (survives to about 10°F/-12°C), mâche/corn salad (survives to 5°F/-15°C), spinach (survives to about 15°F/-9°C with mulch), leeks, garlic, and parsnips. In mild climates (Zones 8–11), you can grow a much broader range including broccoli, cabbage, lettuce, arugula, Asian greens, chard, and carrots through winter with little or no protection.
Can I grow vegetables indoors in winter?
Yes — indoor winter gardening is highly productive with the right setup. Microgreens grow in 7–21 days under any basic grow light or bright south-facing window. Sprouting requires only a jar and water. Herbs including chives, parsley, mint, and cilantro grow well on windowsills. For full vegetables (lettuce, spinach, basil), a dedicated grow light setup dramatically outperforms a window alone.
What is the difference between a cold frame and a row cover?
A cold frame is a rigid structure — a box with a transparent lid — that creates a permanent sheltered environment for plants. It provides the most temperature protection (10–20°F warmer than outside) and is best for crops you plan to grow in one location all winter. Row cover is lightweight breathable fabric draped over plants on hoops. It is more flexible, easier to set up, and works over larger areas, but provides less temperature protection. Most winter gardeners use both: cold frames for priority crops, row cover over larger beds.
Does frost ruin vegetables?
Not necessarily — it depends on the vegetable. Cold-hardy crops like kale, Brussels sprouts, parsnips, mâche, and carrots actually taste better after frost exposure because cold temperatures convert starches to sugars. Tender crops like tomatoes, peppers, beans, and basil are killed by even a light frost. The key is matching crops to your conditions: plant frost-hardy varieties for outdoor winter growing, and protect tender crops or grow them indoors.
When should I start a winter vegetable garden?
The most important thing about winter gardening is that you cannot start it in winter — plants need to be established before cold and short days arrive. For outdoor winter crops, most should be in the ground by September–October in most climates. For cold frames and row covers, plants should be established and 3–4 inches tall before you need to close or cover them. The one exception is indoor growing (microgreens, sprouting, windowsill herbs), which can be started any time of year.
Is winter gardening worth it?
Yes, for several reasons. Cold-hardy winter vegetables often have superior flavor compared to their summer equivalents — frost-sweetened kale and parsnips are genuinely delicious. Winter gardens have virtually no pest pressure. Garlic planted in fall produces one of the most satisfying harvests of the following summer. And indoor growing in winter provides fresh microgreens, sprouts, and herbs that are more nutritious than anything you can buy at a grocery store in January. The investment of a cold frame or a bag of row cover pays dividends for years.
What is the easiest vegetable to grow in winter for beginners?
For outdoor growing: kale is the most forgiving — it is nearly impossible to kill with cold, tastes better after frost, and produces for months from a single planting. For indoor growing: mung bean sprouts are the absolute easiest — just rinse seeds twice a day in a jar and harvest in 3–5 days, no soil or light required. For a windowsill herb: chives grow in almost any light and can be harvested repeatedly throughout winter.
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