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Botanical Interests

Turga Parsnip Seeds

Turga Parsnip Seeds

Regular price $1.25
Regular price Sale price $1.25
(~170 seeds)
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Product Details

Versatile and nutritious, parsnips are being added to the menus of many restaurants. You'll love the tender carrot-like roots for their sweet and distinctive flavor that's delicious in soups and stews, mashed, stir-fried, or roasted. The trick to growing the sweetest parsnips? Wait to harvest the roots until after the first frost. Cold temperatures change the starch into sugar, making them sweet and flavorful.

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  • Variety Info
  • Sowing Info
  • Growing Info

Variety Info

Days to Maturity: 100-110 days

Family: Apiaceae

Native: Eurasia

Hardiness: Biennial grown as annual. Roots can be harvested in fall after a few frosts or left in ground through winter for harvest before tops begin growth in spring.

Variety Info: Creamy white, tapered roots; foliage is a much broader leaf than carrot foliage.

Sowing Info

When to Sow Outside: RECOMMENDED. Late spring or early summer, about 4 months before your average first fall frost date. Mild Climates: Sow in fall for harvest the following spring. Ideal soil temperature for germination is 50°–70°F.

When to Start Inside: Not recommended.

Days to Emerge: 10–25 days

Seed Depth: ½"

Seed Spacing: A group of 3 seeds every 3"

Row Spacing: 18"

Thinning: When 4" tall, thin to 1 every 3"

Growing Info

Harvesting: To harvest parsnips, dig them up with a shovel or garden fork being careful not to cut or damage roots. If you wish to harvest before winter, leave parsnips in the ground for at least 2 weeks after a hard fall frost. You can improve the sweetness by storing at 32°-34°F for 2 weeks before using. If you leave parsnips in the soil over winter, throw a few inches of soil over the crowns and mulch heavily with straw or compost after the first fall frosts. During extended cold periods, stored starches are changed to sugar as the first-year plants prepare for new growth, thus roots harvested in early spring are especially tender and sweet. The roots lose flavor and become fibrous if you do not harvest them before new tops and seed stalks begin to grow.