Seed to Supper Database
Carrot
Grower's Guide"Root to frond, penny to plate — the hardest-working vegetable in your kitchen."
View All Carrot RecipesA bag of carrots costs less than a dollar and works harder than anything else in your crisper drawer. The roots sweeten your soups, the tops make pesto, and even the peels belong in your stockpot — not your trash can.
6
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
44
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Easy — great for beginners and kids
Sun
Full sun to part shade (4-6+ hours)
Water
1 inch per week, even and consistent
Time to Harvest
60-80 days from seed
Zones
3-10 (cool-season crop)
Spacing
2-3 inches apart, rows 12 inches apart
🪴 Where You Can Grow It
Garden bed
Raised bed
5-gallon bucket
Grow bag
Deep patio pot (12+ inches)
Window box (short varieties)
Straw bale
🌱 Best Varieties
Danvers Half Long
Heavy or clay soil — shorter root handles tough ground
Nantes
Sweet, tender, and cylindrical — best for fresh eating and kids
Chantenay
Short and stout — perfect for containers and shallow beds
Imperator
Long, classic grocery-store shape — needs deep, loose soil
Little Finger
Baby carrots in 55 days — great for pots and impatient gardeners
Cosmic Purple
Purple skin, orange core — fun for kids, same great flavor
✅ Good Companions
Onion
Leek
Rosemary
Sage
Lettuce
Tomato
Chives
Radish
⛔ Keep Away From
Dill
Parsnip
Celery
💡 Grandmaw's Tips
Mix carrot seeds with a little sand before sowing — those tiny seeds clump together and you'll spend forever thinning if you don't.
Don't add fresh manure or heavy nitrogen fertilizer to carrot beds. You'll get gorgeous leafy tops and forked, hairy roots. Carrots want loose soil and last year's compost.
Keep the soil surface moist until seeds sprout — that can take 14-21 days. Lay a damp burlap sack or board over the row and check daily. Once you see green, remove it.
Plant radish seeds in the same row. They sprout fast, mark your row, break up crusty soil for the carrots, and you'll harvest them before the carrots need the space.
Carrots get sweeter after a light frost. If you're in zone 6 or colder, leave them in the ground, mulch heavily with straw, and pull them through late fall and early winter.
If your soil is rocky or heavy clay, grow short varieties in raised beds or buckets filled with a loose potting mix. Fighting your soil isn't worth it.
Every item below works beautifully with carrot.
🥩 Proteins
Chicken thighs
Ground beef
Pot roast
Pork shoulder
Eggs
Lentils
Canned tuna
Bacon
Italian sausage
Chickpeas
Ham hock
White beans
🥬 Vegetables
Onion
Potato
Celery
Peas
Green beans
Parsnip
Turnip
Cabbage
Corn
Bell pepper
Broccoli
Mushrooms
🌿 Herbs
Parsley
Dill
Thyme
Rosemary
Chives
Cilantro
Tarragon
Mint
🧂 Spices
Garlic
Ginger
Cumin
Cinnamon
Nutmeg
Black pepper
Paprika
Coriander
Turmeric
Red pepper flakes
🧀 Dairy
Butter
Cheddar
Sour cream
Cream cheese
Parmesan
Heavy cream
Yogurt
🫙 Pantry
Olive oil
Honey
Brown sugar
Chicken broth
Rice
Pasta
Bread
Soy sauce
Vinegar
Flour
Tomato paste
Raisins
Here's how to keep carrot all year long.
🧊 Freezing (Blanched)
10-12 months
Best for: Soups, stews, casseroles, pot pies
💡 Blanch coins or dices in boiling water for 2-3 minutes, ice bath, drain, and freeze flat on a sheet pan before bagging. Skip blanching and they'll turn rubbery and tasteless in a month.
🥫 Pressure Canning
12-18 months
Best for: Ready-to-use carrots for soups, sides, and stews
💡 Carrots are low-acid, so water bath won't cut it — you need a pressure canner. Pack hot into jars, process pints at 11 lbs pressure for 25 minutes.
🥒 Pickling (Refrigerator or Water Bath)
2-3 months (fridge) / 12 months (canned)
Best for: Tacos, banh mi, snacking, charcuterie boards
💡 Quick-pickle carrot sticks in equal parts vinegar and water with sugar, salt, and a clove of garlic. Ready in 2 hours, perfect in 2 days.
🌀 Dehydrating
12-24 months
Best for: Backpacking meals, soup mixes, seasoning powder
💡 Shred or slice thin, blanch first for best color, then dehydrate at 125°F for 6-10 hours. Grind dried carrots into powder for instant soup base.
🏠 Root Cellaring
4-6 months
Best for: Fresh eating all winter long
💡 Layer unwashed carrots in damp sand in a bucket or crate, store at 32-40°F. A cold garage, unheated basement, or buried trash can works. Don't wash them until you're ready to eat — the dirt protects them.
🫙 Fermented (Carrot Sticks or Ginger-Carrot Kraut)
3-6 months (refrigerated)
Best for: Probiotic-rich snacking, taco toppings, sandwich add-ons
💡 Pack carrot sticks in a 2% salt brine (1 tablespoon salt per quart of water), keep submerged, and let sit at room temperature for 5-7 days. Tangy, crunchy, and good for your gut.
Seed to Supper to Seed
Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.
🌰
Sow seeds directly in loose soil 2-3 weeks before last frost
🌱
Thin seedlings to 2-3 inches apart once they're 2 inches tall
💧
Water consistently — uneven watering causes cracking and bitter roots
🥕
Harvest when tops of roots peek above soil and shoulders are ½–¾ inch wide
🔪
Save tops for pesto, peels for stock, and roots for every meal this week
🍲
Cook fresh — soups, roasts, salads, snacks, baked goods
🧊
Preserve the surplus — freeze, pickle, dehydrate, ferment, or root cellar
♻️
Compost scraps and trimmings back into the garden bed
🌸
Leave one or two carrots in the ground to overwinter, flower, and set seed in year two
🌰
Collect dried seed heads and save for next year's planting