10 Fast-Growing Vegetables You Can Harvest Quickly

Plant these crops for your fastest summer harvest ever.

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growing a garden vegetables

Fast-Growing Veggies

Fast-growing vegetables are great for backyard gardeners who want to maximize their summer harvest (or who are just impatient!). For every quick-growing veggie we’ve chosen for our list, we’ve included the number of days it needs before it’s ready to harvest.

Plus, check out these Lawn and Yard Maintenance and Gardening Tips. Our experts weigh in with their best tips ever about how to produce a healthy and beautiful lawn and garden.

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Hakurei Turnip
John Burke/Getty Images

Hakurei Turnip

BRASSICA RAPA; 38 days to harvest

Quick-growing salad turnips, like Hakurei, are popular at farmers markets but easy to grow at home, too. Ready to dig up just weeks after seeding, they are known as a dual-purpose crop, yielding sweet roots as well as tasty greens for salads and stir-fries.

Why we love it: The golf ball-size roots are delicious raw, cooked or pickled. Plus these super veggies are loaded with vitamin C, calcium and iron. Turnips also tolerate fall frosts and turn sweeter in cool weather.

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Fresh spinach leaves in bowl on rustic wooden table
Elenglush/Shutterstock

Smooth-Leaf Spinach

SPINACIA OLERACEA; 38 days to harvest

Seed companies offer three types of spinach: savoy, semi-savoy and smooth-leaf. For rapid growth, stick with smooth varieties like Corvair or Space. Their round-to-oval leaves stay compact and maintain quality for an extended harvest season. Here are a dozen vegetables you can grow in pots.

Why we love it: Long stems and flat foliage make harvesting and washing a snap.

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Adelaide Carrot
Pinetree Garden Seeds

Adelaide Carrot

DAUCUS CAROTA VAR. SATIVUS; 50 days to harvest

Forget the imposter baby carrots found in the supermarket. Adelaide is a true baby carrot, with three- to four-inch-long roots and a mild flavor. It’s also among the earliest carrots to mature, with roots that are ready to be pulled in just seven weeks. These are our 10 best tips for growing plants from seed.

Why we love it: Even those without gardens can grow these baby carrots by sowing seeds in pots or window boxes.

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radishes
Del Boy/Shutterstock

Cherry Belle Radish

RAPHANUS SATIVUS; 22 days to harvest

For more than 60 years, this award-winning variety has been a garden standard, and for good reason. It offers an extra-early harvest of small, rounded roots with cherry red skin and crisp white flesh. This crop can be harvested three weeks after seeding. Learn about easy vegetables everyone should grow.

Why we love it: Radishes are edible from top to bottom! Eat the roots and leaves, then let a few plants flower for the blooms and crunchy seed pods. Generally speaking the longer you allow radishes to grow, the spicier they will taste when you dig them up. Let ’em linger, but not too long. Then they become pithy rather than more flavorful.

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Tokyo Bekana Cabbage birds and blooms
Niki Jabbour/ Birds and Blooms

Tokyo Bekana Cabbage

BRASSICA RAPA VAR. PEKINENSIS, 30 days to harvest

Although Tokyo Bekana looks like lettuce, it’s actually a loose-leaf Chinese cabbage. Slender white stems hold attractive rosettes of crinkly lime-green leaves. The flavor is sweet and mild, and the plants tolerate cold, thriving in early spring and autumn. Here are 12 ways to prepare your lawn and garden for fall.

Why we love it: This easy-to-grow green is perfect for garden beds but works well in window boxes and containers, too.

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farmer inspecting kale leaves
Ron Levine/Getty Images

Kale

BRASSICA OLERACEA; 65 days to harvest

This superfood not only packs a nutritional punch but is speedy from seed to harvest. Among the quickest to grow are smooth-leaved varieties like Toscano and Red Russian, which can be harvested as greens a mere month from sowing. Here’s how to build your own raised beds.

Why we love it: The leaves of recently sprouted kale are more tender than those harvested from mature plants. On the other end of the harvest spectrum, kale can even be harvested after a snowfall. Cooler temps prompt kale to turn stored starch into sugars, which makes it even sweeter. Give your yield a further boost by harvesting outer leaves when they’re eight to 10 inches tall.

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Tatsoi
Johnny's Selected Seeds

Tatsoi

BRASSICA RAPA VAR. NARINOSA; 45 days to harvest

Tatsoi is a quick-growing mustard that forms low rosettes of spoon-shaped, deep green leaves. It has a mild flavor and can be eaten raw or cooked. Tatsoi is very hardy, thriving in fall gardens and winter cold frames. Check out the tools every vegetable gardener needs.

Why we love it: Light-challenged gardeners appreciate that tatsoi grows well in partial shade.

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arugula
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Arugula

ERUCA SATIVA; 40 days to harvest

The peppery leaves of arugula have been adding zip to salads for more than 2,000 years, and for good reason. This gourmet green is über fast, with baby leaves ready just three weeks from seeding. After you’ve had your fill of greens, allow a few plants to flower. The dainty blooms are edible and add a pretty pop of color to salads.

Why we love it: Arugula thrives in cool weather and can be planted as soon as the soil thaws in early spring.

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Small lettuce plants in garden bed
Artit Thongchuea/Shutterstock

Leaf Lettuce

LACTUCA SATIVA; 45 days to harvest

There are many types of lettuce, but for sheer speed you can’t beat this one. Harvest-ready in six weeks, it comes in a variety of leaf colors and textures. Best bets include Red Salad Bowl, Black Seeded Simpson and Merlot. Start sowing seeds in early spring, and plant more every few weeks for months of homegrown lettuce. Growing vegetables but not in pots? Here’s what you need to know about preparing the soil.

Why we love it: Leaf lettuce is pretty and productive. Tuck it into spring containers with pansies for an eye-catching, edible combination.

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Petite Snap-Greens Pea
Johnny's Selected Seeds

Petite Snap-Greens Pea

PISUM SATIVUM; 30 days to harvest

If you love cute leafy greens, you’ll want to give Petite Snap-Greens a whirl. It’s a new variety grown for its dense clusters of edible leaflets, not for the pods or peas themselves. Sow seeds in pots or beds and begin harvesting the leafy tendrils soon after they form. Here are 10 more veggies to try in your garden.

Why we love it: The pleasant crunch of the leaflets add bright flavor to pastas, salads, stir-fries and wraps.

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Patio Pride pea
via Parkseed.com

Four More Super Fast-Growing Veggies We Recommend

1. Patio Pride pea: Ready to harvest six weeks from seeding, this 2017 All-America Selections award-winner bears plump edible pods. It grows about a foot tall and is a fantastic find for hanging baskets.

2. Payload squash: Disease resistance and heavy yields of smooth green fruits in 45 days make this summer squash a real winner.

3. Korist kohlrabi: Crisp, rounded stems of kohlrabi are delicious raw or cooked. Korist grows four inches wide. Begin harvesting 55 days after sowing seeds.

4. Porch Pick bush beans: No space is no problem. Porch Pick forms compact plants for small gardens or containers. Expect a bumper crop of tender green pods 55 days from sowing.

When planning your salad garden, keep in mind one of the most serious dangers to new shoots and buds: hungry critters. Here’s how to deter them in humane ways.