Seed to Supper Database
Spinach
Grower's Guide"From cool soil to warm skillet — every leaf earns its keep."
View All Spinach RecipesSpinach is the quiet workhorse of a budget garden — it grows fast, grows cheap, and gives you more nutrition per penny than almost anything else in the dirt. The leaves feed your family, the stems flavor your broth, and what's left feeds next year's soil.
6
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
43
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Easy — one of the best beginner crops
Sun
Partial to full sun (3-6 hours)
Water
1 inch per week, keep soil moist
Time to Harvest
30-45 days from seed
Zones
2-11 (cool-season annual)
Spacing
4-6 inches apart, rows 12 inches
🪴 Where You Can Grow It
Garden bed
Raised bed
Window box
Patio pot
Grow bag
Balcony railing planter
Straw bale
Recycled container (any 6-inch-deep pot)
🌱 Best Varieties
Bloomsdale Long Standing
Classic savoy type — crinkly leaves, slow to bolt, great for beginners
Baby's Leaf Hybrid
Smooth flat leaves perfect for salads — harvest in 25 days
Giant Noble
Huge leaves, heavy yields — best for cooking and freezing in bulk
Space
Smooth, upright leaves — good for containers and tight spacing
Malabar (warm-season substitute)
Not true spinach but grows in summer heat when regular spinach bolts
✅ Good Companions
Strawberries
Peas
Beans
Cabbage
Cauliflower
Radishes
Celery
Onions
⛔ Keep Away From
Fennel
Potatoes
💡 Grandmaw's Tips
Spinach hates heat. Plant it 4-6 weeks before your last frost in spring, or 6-8 weeks before first frost in fall. The fall crop is usually better because the cool nights make the leaves sweeter.
Sow seeds every 2 weeks for a continuous harvest instead of one big glut. That way you're picking fresh spinach for 2-3 months straight.
Don't pull the whole plant — pick outer leaves first and let the center keep growing. One plant can give you 3-4 harvests this way.
If your spinach starts bolting (shooting up a tall stalk), harvest everything immediately. The leaves get bitter fast once the plant decides to flower.
Spinach is a heavy nitrogen feeder. Work compost into the bed before planting and side-dress with compost tea every 3 weeks.
Shade cloth or taller companion plants can buy you an extra 2-3 weeks of harvest when temperatures start climbing.
Every item below works beautifully with spinach.
🥩 Proteins
Eggs
Chicken thighs
Bacon
Italian sausage
Ground beef
Canned tuna
Salmon
White beans
Lentils
Chickpeas
Tofu
Ham
🥬 Vegetables
Onion
Garlic
Mushrooms
Tomato
Bell pepper
Artichoke
Potato
Carrot
Corn
Zucchini
Sun-dried tomatoes
🌿 Herbs
Basil
Dill
Parsley
Oregano
Thyme
Chives
Mint
Tarragon
🧂 Spices
Garlic powder
Nutmeg
Red pepper flakes
Black pepper
Cumin
Paprika
Italian seasoning
Onion powder
Lemon zest
Ginger
🧀 Dairy
Cream cheese
Parmesan
Mozzarella
Ricotta
Feta
Sour cream
Heavy cream
Goat cheese
🫙 Pantry
Olive oil
Sesame oil
Rice
Pasta
Tortillas
Bread
Chicken broth
Lemon juice
Canned tomatoes
Soy sauce
Vinegar
Pine nuts
Here's how to keep spinach all year long.
❄️ Blanch and Freeze
10-12 months
Best for: Smoothies, soups, casseroles, sautés
💡 Blanch in boiling water for 2 minutes, ice bath, squeeze out every drop of water, then freeze flat in bags. One grocery-store bag of spinach fits in a sandwich-sized freezer bag.
🧊 Flash Freeze (No Blanch)
3-6 months
Best for: Smoothies and blending only
💡 Spread dry leaves on a sheet pan, freeze solid, then bag. Easier than blanching but the texture won't hold up for cooking — smoothies only.
🌀 Dehydrating
12-18 months
Best for: Powder for smoothies, seasoning, pasta dough
💡 Dry at 125°F until leaves crumble between your fingers. Grind into powder and store in a jar. One tablespoon of powder equals about a cup of fresh spinach.
🫙 Pressure Canning
12-18 months
Best for: Ready-to-eat canned greens, side dish straight from the jar
💡 Spinach is low-acid so it must be pressure canned — no water bath. Pack hot into jars, process at 10 lbs pressure. It's a lot of work for greens, but shelf-stable spinach in January is worth it.
🧈 Freeze in Portions with Butter or Oil
6-8 months
Best for: Instant sautéed spinach, pasta toss-ins
💡 Sauté spinach in butter or olive oil, portion into ice cube trays, freeze. Pop a cube into any hot pan and dinner's half done.
🥧 Freeze in Prepared Dishes
3-4 months
Best for: Spanakopita, stuffed shells, spinach quiche
💡 Make the whole dish, freeze before baking. Pull it out the morning you need it and bake straight from frozen — add 15-20 minutes to the cook time.
Seed to Supper to Seed
Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.
🌱
Direct sow seeds in cool soil 4-6 weeks before last frost — or start in fall for an even sweeter crop
💧
Keep soil consistently moist — spinach bolts fast if it gets thirsty or hot
🥬
Harvest outer leaves at 3-4 inches, leaving the crown to keep producing
🥗
Eat fresh — salads, sandwiches, smoothies, quick sautés
🍳
Cook the surplus — eggs, pasta, soups, casseroles, dips
❄️
Blanch and freeze bags for winter cooking
🌀
Dehydrate into powder for year-round nutrition
🌸
Let 2-3 plants bolt and flower for the pollinators
🫘
Collect dry seeds from bolted plants — store in a cool, dry envelope
♻️
Chop remaining plant material and compost it — those roots add nitrogen right back to the bed