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Seed to Supper Database

Cucumber

Grower's Guide

"Cool, crisp, and cheap to grow — from garden to table to jar."

View All Cucumber Recipes

A single cucumber plant can give you more than you know what to do with — and that's the whole point. Fresh in salads, pickled in jars, and soothing on tired skin, there's not a bit of this vine that goes to waste.

7
Parts Mapped
Every piece accounted for
48
Total Uses
Nothing wasted
6
Preservation Methods
Year-round supply
Difficulty
Easy — one of the best beginner crops
Sun
Full sun (6-8 hours)
Water
1-2 inches per week, consistent
Time to Harvest
50-70 days from seed
Zones
3-11 (annual, warm season)
Spacing
12-18 inches apart (trellised), 36 inches (sprawling)

🪴 Where You Can Grow It

Garden bed Raised bed 5-gallon bucket Grow bag Large patio pot Straw bale Trellis or fence line Cattle panel arch

🌱 Best Varieties

Marketmore 76
Slicing — classic dark green, disease-resistant, reliable
Boston Pickling
Pickling — small, bumpy, firm flesh made for the jar
Straight Eight
All-purpose — uniform shape, great flavor fresh or pickled
Spacemaster
Containers — compact bush type, perfect for pots and small spaces
Lemon Cucumber
Fresh eating — round, yellow, mild and sweet, kids love them
National Pickling
Canning — heavy producer, sets fruit fast for big pickle batches

✅ Good Companions

Beans
Corn
Peas
Sunflowers
Lettuce
Radishes
Dill
Marigolds

⛔ Keep Away From

Potatoes
Aromatic herbs (sage, mint)
Melons (share pests)

💡 Grandmaw's Tips

🌱 Train them up a trellis or cattle panel and you'll get straighter fruit, better air flow, fewer diseases, and way more cukes per square foot.
🌱 Pick every single day once they start producing. If you let one get big and yellow on the vine, the whole plant thinks its job is done and slows way down.
🌱 Water at the base, not overhead. Wet leaves invite powdery mildew faster than anything, and once it shows up it's hard to shake.
🌱 Plant a second round of seeds 3-4 weeks after the first so you've got fresh cukes coming in when the first planting starts to fade.
🌱 If you see bitter cucumbers, you're probably watering unevenly. They need consistent moisture — don't let them dry out and then flood them.
🌱 Throw a handful of straw mulch around the base to keep the soil cool and moist. Cucumbers hate hot, dry roots.
🌱 Bees pollinate cucumbers, so plant some flowers nearby. No bees, no cukes — it's that simple.

Every item below works beautifully with cucumber.

🥩 Proteins

Grilled chicken Chicken thighs Canned tuna Shrimp Eggs Salmon Ground lamb Chickpeas White beans Tofu Lentils

🥬 Vegetables

Tomato Red onion Bell pepper Avocado Radish Carrot Corn Jalapeño Celery Cabbage Spinach

🌿 Herbs

Dill Mint Cilantro Parsley Chives Basil Tarragon

🧂 Spices

Garlic Black pepper Red pepper flakes Sesame seeds Cumin Sumac Onion powder Coriander Mustard seed

🧀 Dairy

Feta Cream cheese Sour cream Plain yogurt Cheddar Goat cheese Mozzarella

🫙 Pantry

Rice vinegar Sesame oil Olive oil Soy sauce White vinegar Bread Pita Rice Canned beans Tortillas Lemon juice Sugar

Here's how to keep cucumber all year long.

🫙 Water Bath Canning (Dill Pickles)

12-18 months
Best for: Snacking, burgers, sandwiches, relish trays
💡 Always trim that blossom end off — there's an enzyme in there that'll turn your crunchy pickles into mush. Ask me how I learned that.

🫙 Refrigerator Pickles (Quick Pickles)

2-3 months in fridge
Best for: Snacking, tacos, sandwiches, quick gifts
💡 Vinegar, water, salt, garlic, dill, a pinch of sugar — pour it hot over sliced cukes in a jar and you've got pickles by tomorrow.

🧊 Freezing (for cooking only)

6-8 months
Best for: Smoothies, cold soups, infused water
💡 Frozen cucumbers go soft when thawed, so don't plan on salads. Freeze slices on a sheet pan first, then bag them for drinks and blending.

🫙 Fermented Pickles (Salt Brine)

4-6 months in fridge
Best for: Probiotic-rich snacking, charcuterie boards
💡 No vinegar needed — just salt water, garlic, and dill. Let them sit on the counter 3-7 days until they're bubbly and sour. That's the old way.

🥫 Canning Relish

12-18 months
Best for: Hot dogs, burgers, tuna salad, deviled eggs
💡 This is what you make when you've got 40 cucumbers on the counter and company ain't coming. Chop, cook, jar, done.

🌞 Dehydrating

6-12 months
Best for: Cucumber chips for snacking, trail mix, seasoning powder
💡 Slice thin as a dime, lay flat on the dehydrator trays, and run at 125°F for 8-12 hours. Sprinkle with salt or ranch seasoning before drying.

Seed to Supper to Seed

Nothing leaves the cycle. Everything comes back around.

🌱
Direct sow seeds after last frost when soil hits 65°F, or start indoors 3 weeks early
🌿
Train vines up a trellis and keep soil consistently moist
🐝
Let the bees do their work — plant flowers nearby to attract pollinators
🥒
Harvest every day or two when fruits are 4-8 inches — don't let them get away from you
🥗
Eat fresh — salads, sandwiches, snacks, tzatziki, gazpacho
🫙
Pickle the surplus — dill pickles, bread and butter, relish, fermented
🧊
Freeze slices for smoothies and infused water through winter
💛
Let one fruit go fully yellow and ripe on the vine for seed saving
🫘
Scoop seeds, rinse, dry, and store in a cool place for next spring
♻️
Compost vines, ends, and peels — return every bit to the soil