Texas Agrilife Extension Service
Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

September 2009


Fall and Winter Greens & Reds & More


National Garden Bureau

Savoyed cabbage
Savoyed cabbage

Fall color isn't just for trees - your garden can show color, too.

There's always room - somewhere in the garden

We're not talking about setting aside a large area for fall. Although if you have that much space to spare, that's fine. All you need is some room amidst existing plants. Consider using available space in your flower garden or mixed border; fill in areas with edibles as you remove tired-looking annuals or prune back perennials. Of course, there is always some room in the vegetable or herb garden.

For fall harvests you can start everything from seed sown directly in the garden. In spring, you can usually find a plethora of starts - cell packs or small potted plants at local nurseries, garden centers, and home stores. In summer, you won't find starts; you have to rely on seed you purchased.

Great Greens

Do you enjoy salad and other greens fresh from the garden? In season, they are fabulous, especially cut-and-come-again greens like leaf lettuces, arugula, mustard, and others. Yet have you seen the price of mixed greens - often called mesclun - at the grocery store lately? For what you would pay for two weeks worth of salad greens for a family of four, you can buy more than enough seed to keep you in salad all fall and well into winter. Look for greens that you would normally plant in spring before the last frost date - those that can take some cold.

Since these are mostly "foliage plants," look for those that add a dimension of color in addition to "leafy green" when selecting varieties to add to your garden. If you don't segregate ornamentals from edibles, you will want the plants to add as much interest - leaf color, shape, size and plant form - as possible.

Choose from among the many leaf lettuces, including these All-American Selection winners: 'Red Sails,' 'Buttercrunch,' 'Ruby,' and 'Salad Bowl.' Romaines can take the cold; try 'Rouge d'Hiver' and 'Freckles' for good color. Mix in some 'Lollo Rossa,' 'Arctic King,' 'Winter Marvel,' and 'North Pole' for an outstanding winter collection.

Mix it up

Sow each type of seed separately, or create your own personal mesclun blend. You can mix all the seeds together in a bowl and then scatter them on bare soil - thicker than normal. Make an eighteen-inch-wide swath through a garden bed, or edge the path leading from the sidewalk to your front door. The greens will come up in a colorful carpet. By the time the plants are a few inches tall they will need thinning. Pull up plants at random for an instant salad of baby greens. There is plenty to share with neighbors who seem to sense when picking time starts - and invite them to come over and help themselves to fresh greens.

Since you will be planting in the heat of summer, sow the seed in a partly shaded spot, or provide shade with spun polyester cloth to keep them cooler. Mist lightly during the day to refresh the seedlings and young plants. Otherwise, they require no different care thatn spring-sown seeds. Growing spinach in the spring can be a challenge, as it doesn't like the heat. In fall, it is happy with the cooling weather. Be sure to avoid any varieties that are labeled "summer" spinach. As with the other plants for fall harvest, sow the seed in a partially shaded area to keep the soil from getting too warm.

To many, the flavor of kale - like Brussels sprouts - is enhanced by frost. For diversity of leaf shape, color (from deep green to blue), size, and crunch, choose several kale varieties. Finely curled red-leafed 'Redbor Hybrid,' and bluish crinkle-leafed 'Winterbor' are amazingly hardy and can last through winter. 'Lacinata' holds its deep bluish-green leaves upright, while 'Red Russian' with a mauve tinge to the leaves, has a more open habit.

Swiss chard is a must-have. Forget about the plain green leaves you knew as a child. Grow 'Bright Lights' (1998 AAS winner) to delight your eyes as well as your palate. With ribs that run the gamut from silver to gold, orange, pink, red and green, a stand of Swss chard looks like stained glass with the early morning or late afternoon sun glimmering through it. It is so decorative in the garden you don't have to eat it.

Add some pizzazz

Other less common, yet more flavorful greens, add spice to the mix. Depending on your taste, include some piquant greens such as arugula and 'Osake Purple' mustard greens. 'Wrinkled Crinkled Crumpled' cress is unique for its savoyed leaves. Broccoli raab, a sprouting broccoli (also known by such names as raab, rapa, rapini, and spring broccoli) is sumptuous stir-fried in olive oil and garlic, served on pasta.

Other greens add interesting form and color, with their own unique flavors. Mache, (Valerianella locusta) also known as corn salad, has a sweet, nutty flavor. Endive and radicchio have slightly bitter taste. Curly endives, such as 'Tres Fin,' have finely dissected, curly leaves. Oriental greens round out the medley. From mizuna to tatsoi, pac choi, bok choy, and komatsuna and their cultivars, there is an assortment of new, vitamin-filled greens to try.


Earth Kind uses research-proven techniques to provide maximum gardening and landscape performance while preserving and protecting the environment. For more information on Earth Kind Landscape Management Practices see our web site: https://earthkind.tamu.edu