Cold-weather gardening hinges on one key trait: the ability to germinate, grow, and often improve under frost. True frost-tolerant crops do more than merely survive a freeze β many convert starches to sugars when temperatures drop, making them sweeter and more flavorful than anything grown in summer heat. This natural antifreeze mechanism is the core reason these vegetables belong in every cool-season garden.
The practical challenge is timing. Spring plantings must go in early enough to mature before summer heat triggers bolting, while fall plantings need enough weeks before hard ground freeze to reach harvestable size. Most of these crops can handle light frosts (28β32Β°F) without protection and several tolerate harder freezes with minimal row cover. Understanding each crop's days-to-harvest tells you how far ahead of your last or first frost date to sow.
Cool-season crops also share a forgiving light requirement β most tolerate partial shade, which matters in early spring when deciduous trees are still leafed out or structures cast long shadows. Soil temperature is often the real limiter: aim for 40β75Β°F at sowing depth, and you'll see reliable germination across almost every crop on this list.
At a glance
| Crop | Type | Days to harvest | Sun | Heat | Frost | Level |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radish | Cool | 25β35 days | Part | β | β | Easy |
| Spinach | Cool | 35β50 days | Part | β | β | Easy |
| Cilantro | Cool | 40β55 days | Part | β | β | Easy |
| Lettuce | Cool | 30β60 days | Part | β | β | Easy |
| Swiss chard | Cool | 50β60 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Kale | Cool | 50β65 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Pea | Cool | 55β70 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Beet | Cool | 50β70 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Carrot | Cool | 60β80 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Broccoli | Cool | 60β90 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Parsley | Cool | 70β90 days | Part | β | β | Easy |
| Cabbage | Cool | 60β100 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Cauliflower | Cool | 60β100 days | Full | β | β | Hard |
| Strawberry | Cool | 90β110 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Onion | Cool | 90β120 days | Full | β | β | Moderate |
| Garlic | Cool | 240β270 days | Full | β | β | Easy |
| Asparagus | Cool | 365β730 days | Full | β | β | Hard |
Why each one works
Radish
Cool-season 25β35 daysRadish is the fastest reality check in cold-weather gardening: seeds germinate at soil temps as low as 40Β°F and 'Cherry Belle' or 'French Breakfast' are table-ready in 25 days. They tolerate hard frosts without turning pithy, making them ideal for inter-planting between slower crops to mark rows. Sow every two weeks from late winter through early spring, then again in fall β summer heat causes rapid bolting and hollow roots.
Full radish growing guide βSpinach
Cool-season 35β50 daysSpinach is one of the few vegetables that germinates reliably in near-freezing soil (33Β°F minimum) and can actually overwinter under light snow cover in zones 5β7, emerging in early spring before any competitor. 'Bloomsdale Long Standing' resists bolting longer than flat-leafed types, buying extra harvest weeks. Sow densely and harvest as baby leaves from 25 days for a quicker cut-and-come-again return.
Full spinach growing guide βCilantro
Cool-season 40β55 daysCilantro thrives in the cool-season window precisely because it bolts aggressively in heat β cold weather keeps it in the productive leaf stage far longer. Sow directly (it dislikes transplanting) in early spring or fall at 50β68Β°F soil, and succession-plant every three weeks to maintain continuous harvest. 'Calypso' and 'Leisure' are slow-bolt varieties worth seeking out for extending the harvest window by two to three weeks.
Full cilantro growing guide βLettuce
Cool-season 30β60 daysLettuce germinates best at 60β65Β°F but tolerates light frosts once established, especially loose-leaf and romaine types β butterhead is slightly more frost-sensitive. The wide 30β60 day range means cut-and-come-again leaf varieties deliver fast returns while heading types fill longer cool windows. In cold climates, start transplants indoors 4β6 weeks before last frost and harden off before setting out; row cover extends harvest two to three weeks into freezing nights.
Full lettuce growing guide βSwiss chard
Cool-season 50β60 daysSwiss chard is the cool-season workhorse that bridges into summer β it tolerates both frost and moderate heat, making it productive across a longer window than almost any other vegetable on this list. Plants withstand temperatures into the mid-20sΒ°F with minimal damage and regrow vigorously from the base after harvest. Sow 'Rainbow' or 'Fordhook Giant' 4β6 weeks before last frost and harvest outer leaves continuously through spring, summer, and into fall.
Full swiss chard growing guide βKale
Cool-season 50β65 daysKale converts starches to sugars below 32Β°F, making frost-kissed leaves measurably sweeter than those harvested in warm weather β this is not gardening folklore but verified biochemistry. 'Lacinato' (dinosaur kale) and 'Red Russian' are among the hardiest brassicas, surviving into the teensΒ°F with row cover. Direct sow 6β8 weeks before first fall frost for a peak fall-to-winter harvest, or start transplants 4β6 weeks before last spring frost.
Full kale growing guide βPea
Cool-season 55β70 daysPeas are a true cold-season crop that must be sown while soil is still cold β they stop producing once temperatures consistently exceed 80Β°F, so early planting is non-negotiable. Direct sow as soon as soil is workable (40Β°F+), typically 4β6 weeks before last frost; seedlings tolerate hard frosts after germination. 'Wando' handles temperature fluctuations well, and 'Sugar Snap' provides the longest edible window by producing at both the flat-pod and round-pod stage.
Full pea growing guide βBeet
Cool-season 50β70 daysBeets tolerate frost well after the seedling stage and, like kale, accumulate sugars in cool weather β roots harvested after light frost are noticeably sweeter. They handle dual-use harvesting: thin seedlings at 3β4 inches for baby greens, then allow remaining plants to develop full roots over 60β70 days. Sow 'Detroit Dark Red' or 'Chioggia' 4β6 weeks before last frost in spring and again 8β10 weeks before first fall frost for a second harvest.
Full beet growing guide βCarrot
Cool-season 60β80 daysCarrots left in the ground through light frosts concentrate sugars dramatically β pulling a 'Napoli' or 'Bolero' carrot after the first freeze of fall often yields roots sweeter than any summer-harvested carrot. They require consistent moisture and loose, stone-free soil to develop straight roots; compacted or rocky ground causes forking regardless of cold tolerance. For spring growing, direct sow 3β5 weeks before last frost into soil at least 45Β°F, thinning to 2 inches apart as the critical step most gardeners skip.
Full carrot growing guide βBroccoli
Cool-season 60β90 daysBroccoli requires cool temperatures for head formation β a sustained warm spell before heading triggers premature buttoning (tiny, loose heads) or skips heading entirely. Transplant starts 2β3 weeks before last spring frost, targeting head maturity before summer heat; for fall, transplant 85β100 days before first hard freeze. 'Belstar' and 'Green Magic' are reliable fall varieties; after the main head is cut, side shoots continue producing through multiple frosts, extending the harvest significantly.
Full broccoli growing guide βParsley
Cool-season 70β90 daysParsley is a biennial that survives winter in zones 5β9, re-sprouting in early spring for a second harvest year before going to seed β a trait that makes a single planting surprisingly long-productive. It germinates slowly (21β28 days) even in ideal conditions, so soaking seeds overnight and starting indoors 10β12 weeks before transplant date pays dividends. Flat-leaf ('Italian') types are more frost-tolerant and flavorful than curly types; both handle light freezes well once established.
Full parsley growing guide βCabbage
Cool-season 60β100 daysCabbage heads can withstand temperatures down to 20Β°F once fully hardened, making it one of the toughest brassicas for fall and overwintering production. The key is timing transplants so heads mature during cool weather: aim for transplant 6β8 weeks before first fall frost, targeting maturity in autumn rather than mid-summer heat. 'January King' and 'Deadon' are standout storage varieties bred specifically for cold tolerance and will hold in the garden through hard freezes with minimal quality loss.
Full cabbage growing guide βCauliflower
Cool-season 60β100 daysCauliflower is the most cold-sensitive brassica on this list β it requires the narrowest temperature window (60β65Β°F optimal) and reacts to temperature stress by forming loose, ricey, or discolored curds. Blanching (tying outer leaves over the developing head) is necessary for white varieties to prevent yellowing from sun exposure once the curd appears. Fall planting consistently outperforms spring in most climates because temperatures are declining toward the maturity window rather than rising away from it; transplant 85β100 days before expected first hard frost.
Full cauliflower growing guide βStrawberry
Cool-season 90β110 daysJune-bearing strawberry varieties are among the most frost-tolerant fruits, surviving winters down to -20Β°F under straw mulch and producing their earliest-of-season fruit as temperatures climb in spring. Plant crowns in early spring with the crown at soil level β too deep causes rot, too shallow causes desiccation β and remove first-year flowers to direct energy into root establishment for heavier second-year yields. 'Earliglow' and 'Honeoye' are reliably cold-hardy June-bearers suited to zones 3β8.
Full strawberry growing guide βOnion
Cool-season 90β120 daysOnions are planted as sets or transplants in early spring (or fall in mild climates) and tolerate frost well throughout their long growing season. Day length, not temperature, triggers bulb formation: long-day varieties suit northern gardens above 35Β°N latitude, short-day varieties suit the south, and intermediate types work across the middle range β matching variety to latitude is the single most important onion-growing decision. 'Stuttgarter' (sets) or 'Walla Walla' (transplants) are reliable long-day choices for cold-region spring planting.
Full onion growing guide βGarlic
Cool-season 240β270 daysGarlic is planted in fall (OctoberβNovember in most zones), overwinters underground, and harvests the following midsummer β its 240β270 day cycle is almost entirely cold-weather growing. Fall-planted cloves establish roots before freeze-up and resume growth in early spring, making them the first vegetable to emerge and one of the last to need attention. Hardneck varieties ('Rocambole', 'Porcelain', 'Purple Stripe') far outperform softneck types in cold climates (zones 3β6) for both survival and flavor complexity.
Full garlic growing guide βAsparagus
Cool-season 365β730 daysAsparagus is a perennial investment: crowns planted in year one produce no harvest, a light harvest in year two, and full production from year three onward for 15β25 years. It is one of the most cold-hardy vegetables grown, surviving winters to -40Β°F in zones 3β4 under sufficient mulch, and it emerges earlier in spring than almost any other garden crop. Purchase 2-year-old crowns rather than growing from seed to shorten the wait by one year; 'Jersey Knight' and 'Jersey Supreme' are disease-resistant, high-yielding all-male hybrids suited to cold climates.
Full asparagus growing guide βFrequently asked questions
How do I know if a frost will kill my crops or just toughen them up?
Light frosts (28β32Β°F for a few hours) generally benefit or leave unharmed all crops on this list once established. Hard frosts (below 28Β°F sustained) can damage less-hardy crops like lettuce, cilantro, and peas, especially if plants are young or the freeze is repeated. Row cover rated to 4β6Β°F of frost protection is the practical tool for bridging dangerous cold snaps for borderline-hardy crops.
Can I grow these crops under snow?
Many can tolerate snow cover and actually benefit from it β snow insulates the soil and acts as a buffer against severe wind chill. Kale, spinach, carrots, cabbage, and garlic routinely overwinter under snow in zones 4β6 and emerge undamaged. The risk is freeze-thaw cycles without snow cover, which cause repeated cellular damage; consistent cold with snow is less harmful than fluctuating temperatures without insulation.
What's the best way to extend the cold-weather season even further?
Cold frames and low tunnels with row cover are the highest-value season extension tools β a simple cold frame can push your effective growing zone 1β2 zones warmer, allowing spinach, kale, and carrots to produce through winter in zones 6β7. Unheated hoop houses extend production even further. The key is managing daytime heat buildup: vent covers on sunny days above 45Β°F to prevent premature bolting in spinach and cilantro.
Why do my cool-season crops bolt prematurely in spring?
Bolting is triggered by day length and temperature, not just heat β once days exceed 14 hours and temperatures rise above 75β80Β°F, crops like spinach, cilantro, and lettuce shift energy from leaf to seed production regardless of care. The solution is timing: start these crops early enough that they mature and are harvested before the long-day trigger hits, or switch to bolt-resistant varieties like 'Tyee' spinach or 'Calypso' cilantro that delay the response by several weeks.