Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (2024)

Arugula is full of nutrition and one of the easiest cool-weather crops to grow. Here’s everything you need to know about growing arugula!

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (1)

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe)

One of my favorite things to do at the end of an exhausting and stressful day is go home, put on some comfy clothes, and pour myself a giant serving of … arugula. I know arugula might not be the most obvious choice for everyone, but those little rocket-powered leaves are exactly what my body needs to hit the reset button and transition from tough day to a relaxing evening.

This article on growing arugula is part of our Green of the Month series. To read the rest of the articles in the series, click here.

Something in the peppery—but also creamy, buttery, and almost meaty—taste of those almost-impossible-not-to-grow little greens just gives me a rocket-like boost. And since “rocket” is actually the common name for arugula in the UK and France (actually, roquette in France—but that’s French for “rocket”), I suspect I am not alone in my appreciation of the power of these peppy plants.

The really great thing about growing arugula is that many of you will even be able to plant it right now for a really early spring crop of super-food-rated greens.

The Goods on Growing Arugula

Nutty Nutritiousness

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (2)

If you are looking for a nutty-tasting, low-calorie snack option that offers a vitamin, mineral, and phytochemical power punch, you can eat one-third of a teaspoon of almonds at 5.4 calories. (Actually, this is probably not even the equivalent of a single almond.) Or, you can eat a cup full of arugula at only 5 calories.1)https://www.nutritionvalue.org/comparefoods.php?first=12062&second=11959

I can tell you from experience that you will feel a whole lot more satisfied eating the arugula than the caloric equivalent in almonds. Which is why arugula is a great option if you are trying to cut calories and simultaneously increase your energy levels. Arugula is high in fiber and water content, both of which contribute to your satisfaction level when eating it.

Like mustard greens, arugula is high in calcium and in vitamins A and K. In addition, arugula has lots of glucosinolates, which may help protect against cancer.2)https://guidedoc.com/arugula-health-benefits-superfood-cancer-prevention

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Like spinach, arugula also has high levels of iron. Calorie for calorie, arugula has more iron than beef … by a long shot. Just 25 calories of arugula will get you 8% of your daily iron intake. Meanwhile, you’d need to eat about 160 calories of grass-fed ground beef to get that same quantity of iron.3)http://superfoodprofiles.com/arugula-health-benefits

Just in case you are not totally convinced: In terms of calories consumed, arugula also contains high levels of folate, B vitamins, and trace minerals like magnesium, manganese, potassium, and chlorophyll (which is believed to be a good blood cleanser).

Delicious

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (3)

Image by Hans Braxmeier from Pixabay

Now for the best part. Arugula tastes amazing. It is so darn delicious that I am constantly snapping off leaves in the garden to pop in my mouth. And, as with potato chips, once you start you just can’t stop.

Arugula can spice up almost any meal. It can be used as a stand-alone salad with just a splash of oil, vinegar, and salt. You can mix it with other greens to make a mesclun salad. It is incredible wilted on top of omelets or pizzas, or made into a pesto and served over pasta or on crusty bread with mozzarella. You can even puree it and add it to smoothies, toss it in soups, and so much more.

Easy to Grow

Arugula is one of the easiest cool-weather crops you can grow. And if you don’t mind it being a little spicy and stemmy, you can even grow it all summer long. Giving it a little mid-summer shade will help extend your arugula season.

The wild variety of arugula, in fact, grows like a weed. You can grow arugula as an annual in the garden or as a self-seeding, short-lived perennial in your edible landscape. It’s even great for growing in containers. The plant is mature in about 40 days, but you can also cut baby greens earlier.

If you like great-tasting, low-calorie, high-nutrient-density greens that are as easy to grow as it gets, then arugula is for you!

Recipe

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (4)

Image by Siobhan Dolezal from Pixabay

In case you need more convincing that you need arugula in your garden this year, then get yourself a box of it from the grocery store now and make your own homemade arugula pesto to spread on bread, toss with pasta, or use to dress up your chicken breast.

Easy Arugula Pesto Recipe

  • 2 c. arugula, finely chopped
  • 1 tsp. minced garlic (or a tablespoon if you are a garlic junky like me)
  • ¼ c. finely grated Parmesan or other hard cheese
  • ¼ c. olive oil for thick, spreadable pesto, or ½ c. olive oil for saucy pesto
  • 2 T. chopped nuts (Pine nuts are expensive and don’t grow well in my region. I use almonds, pecans, or even sunflower seeds in my pesto.)
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Put all this stuff in a bowl and mix. Serve or refrigerate. (See, I told you it was easy!)

If you have a food processor, you can skip all that pre-chopping. Instead, throw your chunks of Parmesan, whole nuts, and garlic cloves into your food processor and pulse until they are finely crumbled. After that, toss in your arugula and pulse 2 or 3 times until the arugula is chopped. Finally, stir in your olive oil and salt and pepper.

Seriously, the hardest part about this recipe is waiting to sample some!

A Few Cautionary Things to Know About Growing Arugula

Now, in my opinion, there’s no downside to growing arugula. But, there are a few things you may want to be aware of before you plant.

It’s a Cole Crop

Even though most of us think of arugula as a lettuce, for the purposes of crop rotation, it’s actually a cole crop like cabbage. Avoid planting it after other brassicas like cabbage, broccoli, cauliflower, kale, etc.

Self Spreads

Since we grow most of our food at home, arugula gets bonus points for its eagerness to spread itself around my yard. If it shows up somewhere that I don’t want it to grow, I just dig it up and move it somewhere else. But if you are one of those meticulous gardeners who hates to deal with unwanted plant volunteers, then make sure you do not let this plant flower (even though the flowers are great for pollinators, as well as being edible and delicious).

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Short Shelf Life

Unlike many of the other cole crops—such as cabbage, which can keep for weeks, months, or even years (as sauerkraut)—arugula is best consumed fresh or, if kept in the fridge, within a couple of days after being harvested.

Flea Beetle Favorite

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (6)

Keep an eye out for flea beetles when you’re growing arugula. Image by Brett Hondow from Pixabay

As the weather warms, my arugula leaves often have tiny little holes in them that evidence the fact that I am not alone in my love for this stuff.

Flea beetles seem to munch on it almost as much as I do. Since the minuscule portions those pests eat seem to have no effect on the production of the plants, and since I’m an organic gardener, I just resign myself to share. But if it bothers you, you can use whatever organic pest-control method you use on your other cole crops to discourage flea beetles.

By now, I’m hoping that your mouth is watering and your inner gardener is begging you to grow some arugula. So let’s dig into the details of how to plant.

Growing Arugula

Soil Preparation

Like most cole crops, arugula likes well-prepared garden soil with a pH of 6.2 to 6.8. But, it will grow in less-than-ideal conditions, too. Just throw an inch or 2 of compost on your existing garden bed or row, water well, and get ready to plant.

If you are brand new to gardening and need some ideas for how to prepare your beds, check out this post: “The Easiest Way to Prepare a Garden Bed”

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Seed Starting

You can start arugula indoors under grow lights if you want to. But in my experience, it really does best direct planted. I just scatter the seeds on my soil, then cover them with about a quarter inch of compost and water. Seed guides say it takes 5-7 days for germination, but I usually see my little seedlings popping up in about 3-4 days.

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If you like a more uniform appearance, you can also use your finger to make a little trench row to plant in. Make your finger rows about 3 inches apart and plant seeds the whole way down. Then push just a bit of soil back over the seeds.

Arugula will germinate best in soil temperatures of 40-55ºF.Keep surface soil moist until plants have several true leaves.

Young Plant Care

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (8)

Arugula will grow with almost no care so long as you get a little rain each week. However, you will get the biggest yields with regular watering. Annual arugula has fairly shallow roots, so watering deeply on a weekly basis and shallowly every couple of days will help maintain consistent moisture in the root zone.

Also, if you live in an area that has big temperature fluctuations (like 40ºF one day and 75ºF the next), the best way to keep your arugula from bolting is to mulch around your plants and keep them consistently watered with cool water.

Mature Plant Care

Arugula is ready in about 40 days and can be used as a come-and-cut crop for a couple of months. But since it is quick to bolt and can get stemmy and extra peppery as it ages, rather than worry about long-term mature plant care, think about next-round seed starting.

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Arugula is one of those plants you want to start often. Some people plant more arugula once a week, but personally, I go for about once every 3 weeks.

Because arugula is so fast-growing, I tend to use it almost like a cover crop in my beds that will be primarily used for warm-weather crops. But you can also add more compost to your existing beds and sow in the spaces between your mature plants.

Harvesting

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (9)

Image by Jasmin Sessler from Pixabay

I like to start picking baby greens when the plants are about 2-3 weeks old. I’ll just take one or two leaves from each plant to snack on as I do my gardening chores.

Once the plants are growing well and have leaves that are about 3 inches in length, you can harvest about one-third of the plant about once a week. Trim off the larger, older leaves first.

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If you want to eat arugula every day, then mentally divide your arugula patch into seven sections based on days of the week. For example, harvest your Monday section only on Monday, your Tuesday section only on Tuesday, etc.

If you are planting continuously, as your first plants begin to exhaust, you can start cutting from your next round.

Varieties of Arugula

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (10)

The flower of Eruca sativa (common arugula); Image by SanduStefan from Pixabay

There are two basic varieties of arugula to choose from—wildand common.

Wild arugula has smaller leaves and tends to be more flavorful. However, it is also more stemmy and is harder to harvest. It grows a bit slower than common arugula.

You can generally find two different kinds of wild arugula seeds for sale:

  • Diplotaxis tenuifolia, often referred to as wild rocket or Sylvetta, has yellow flowers and can be grown as a short-lived perennial in some areas.
  • Diplotaxis erucoides, also called wild arugula or wasabi arugula, is an annual with white flowers.

There is also a variety called Diplotaxis muralis, or wall rocket, that grows wild in poor-quality, disturbed soils. You probably don’t want to plant this one in your vegetable garden. But sometimes seed sellers will also refer toDiplotaxis tenuifolia as wall rocket. So, make sure you are checking Latin names on seed packets to get the variety you really want.

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Common arugula, Eruca sativa, has much larger leaves and a milder taste than wild arugula. It is slower to bolt in the heat. It also grows faster and produces more leaves per plant than wild varieties. The flowers are white.

For heavy, consistent, and easy-to-harvest leaf production, choose common arugula. For effortless growing, spectacular taste, but more work on the harvesting end, choose wild arugula.

For either variety, you can find improved versions from different seed retailers that may have been selected over time for different flavor profiles and growth habits. So, feel free to try seeds from different distributors and then save your own seeds from your favorite plants.

Unconventional Growing Tips for Adventure Gardeners

Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (11)

Interplanting your arugula with buckwheat may help it germinate in mid-summer.

Since I am a total arugula addict and really want to eat it year-round, I discovered a trick for germinating arugula outdoors, even in mid-summer. I interplant my arugula with buckwheat. The buckwheat comes up quickly, providing some shade and a bit of a microclimate for the arugula.

I don’t know if this will work in extreme heat, but it has worked for me in 80-90ºF temperatures as long as I keep my buckwheat/arugula patch well watered.

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When grown late in the season, the arugula will bolt and flower more quickly.

I usually only get a couple of cuttings before the plant sends up flower shoots. At that point, I just let it. Mixed in with the buckwheat flowers, it makes for great pollinator food. (In the photo above, you can see arugula growing alongside my lamb’s quarters—another great green that grows well wild and even better in your garden! I think the combination makes for a really pretty pollinator plot.)

I hope you let this wonderful little rocket plant take flight in your garden and on your plate this year!

What Do You Think?

We’d also love to hear your ideas and suggestions for using and growing arugula. Please leave us a line in the comments section below.

____________

This is updated version of an article that was originally published on March 5, 2018. The author may not currently be available to respond to comments, however we encourage our Community members to chime in to share their experiences and answer questions!

The Grow Network is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate program designed to provide a means for our team to earn fees for recommending our favorite products! We may earn a small commission, at no additional cost to you, should you purchase an item after clicking one of our links. Thanks for supporting TGN!

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Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (12)

Tasha Greer

Tasha Greer is a regular contributor to The Grow Network and has cowritten several e-books with Marjory Wildcraft. The author of “Grow Your Own Spices” (December 2020), she also blogs for MorningChores.com and Mother Earth News. For more tips on homesteading and herb and spice gardening, follow Tasha at Simplestead.com.

References

References
1 https://www.nutritionvalue.org/comparefoods.php?first=12062&second=11959
2 https://guidedoc.com/arugula-health-benefits-superfood-cancer-prevention
3 http://superfoodprofiles.com/arugula-health-benefits
Growing Arugula: The Rocket in Your Salad Bowl and Garden (With Recipe) - The Grow Network (2024)

FAQs

How long does it take for arugula to grow? ›

Depending on the variety of arugula you've planted, you can expect to harvest its leaves in 20-50 days after sowing. So, in about three weeks or more of growth, or when the plants get at least 6" tall, identify the largest, outer leaves that are big enough to eat and start harvesting.

Will arugula grow back after cutting? ›

Arugula will grow back once cut, so don't pull the stems. Remember, arugula bolts (goes to flower) quickly in the heat. If this happens, strip the stem of its leaves and use both the leaves and flowers in your salads. The stems can be chopped and used to make a pesto.

Does arugula come back every year? ›

Arugula plants are annual plants that love cool weather and go well in the spring and fall seasons. Being Hardy annual plants, these, when they get overwintered (rarely), can also be turned perennial which when harvested will grow back the following season. This can be done by clipping or cutting the arugula plants.

How far apart do you plant arugula rocket? ›

Arugula Planting and Spacing

Thin plants to 6 inches (15 cm) apart when the seedlings are 4 inches (10 cm) tall. You can eat the thinnings–baby arugula greens in salads and use them as a garnish. Space rows 6 to 18 inches (15-45 cm) apart.

How do you care for arugula rocket? ›

Arugula prefers rich, moist soil and cooler temperatures but can withstand a variety of different climates. Hot weather causes quick bolting, so it's best to plant in fall or early spring in warmer climates. Arugula germinates well in cool (45˚F) soil and will continue to do so until it gets up to 75˚F.

What month do you plant arugula? ›

Arugula
Plant nameZoneStart seeds outdoors
Arugula7aApril 1-15; sow every 2-3 weeks for continuous harvest
Arugula7bApril 1-15; sow every 2-3 weeks for continuous harvest
Arugula8aMarch 1-15; sow every 2-3 weeks for continuous harvest
Arugula8bMarch 1-15; sow every 2-3 weeks for continuous harvest
14 more rows

How much arugula do you get from one plant? ›

Mild Climates: Sow in fall for winter harvest. When to Start Inside: Not recommended. How many do I plant? : Annual arugula yields 2.5 to 3 lbs.

How tall does arugula grow? ›

2–3 ft. tall

Is it too late to plant arugula? ›

When to Plant Arugula. Arugula seeds will germinate in soil temperatures as low as 40°F (4°C), so sow them outdoors as soon as the soil can be worked in spring. See local frost dates. Sow in late summer or early fall for a fall or winter harvest.

Should I let my arugula flower? ›

I was taught to harvest my arugula plants before they bolted and flowered because it would turn the leaves from tender and spicy to bitter and tough. It turns out, though, that bolting arugula has its own edible gift--the pale, cross-shaped flowers. They are delicious, delicately spicy and even a little sweet.

What can you not plant near arugula? ›

Most plants in the nightshade or solanum family are incompatible with arugula plants. This is because nightshades prefer a more acidic soil pH of 5.5-6.5 while arugula prefers a more neutral soil pH of 6.5-7. It is not recommended to grow arugula next to eggplant, peppers, potatoes, or tomato.

What are the side effects of arugula? ›

Overeating arugula can cause short-term side effects such as flatulence, abdominal cramping, and discomfort. But, again, it is because of sulforaphane and fibre in the arugula. Excess of arugula is dangerous for people with certain blood disorders or who take medications for blood thinning.

Is spinach healthier than arugula? ›

The calorie, protein, and fiber content of both vegetables is similar, but the vitamins and minerals tip the scale towards spinach — except for calcium. Spinach has more vitamin A, C, K, folate, potassium, magnesium, manganese, and iron.

What is the best way to plant rocket? ›

Sow rocket outdoors from April to early September, and for a further month under cloches or fleece. Make a short, shallow drill up to 1cm (½in) deep, water along the base, then scatter the seeds thinly along its length. Cover lightly with soil then firm gently. If sowing several rows, space them 15cm (6in) apart.

Where is the best place to plant arugula? ›

How to Grow Arugula
Common NameArugula, rocket, garden rocket
Sun ExposureFull sun, part shade
Soil TypeLoamy, moist, well-drained
Soil pHAcidic, neutral (6 to 7)
Bloom TimeSeasonal
6 more rows
Apr 20, 2022

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