Celeriac
VegetableApium graveolens var. rapaceum
Have seeds for this? Add to inventory →Celeriac is a cool-season biennial grown as an annual for its swollen, knobby hypocotyl base, which delivers a rich celery-like flavor with earthy, nutty depth. It is among the most rewarding root vegetables for patient gardeners willing to manage its long growing season. Grated raw or roasted and mashed, the dense white flesh stores well into winter.

Growing Conditions
Growing Conditions
Sunlight
Full Sun to Partial Shade
Water Needs
Moderate
Soil
Deep, moisture-retentive, fertile loam rich in organic matter, well-drained but consistently moist
Spacing
12 inches
Days to Maturity
110 - 120 days from transplant
Growing Zones
Growing Zones
Thrives in USDA Zones 3 - 9
When to Plant
When to Plant
Start Indoors
10-12 weeks before last frost
Transplant
2-4 weeks before last frost, once soil is workable and nights stay above 40°F
Harvest
Harvest when the crown is 3-4 inches across, typically late September through November; a light frost improves flavor. Twist off outer stalks and cut the root flat; store in damp sand or refrigerate.
Phenology (Natural Timing Cues)
Start Indoors
Celeriac has one of the longest lead times of any vegetable and must be started indoors 10-12 weeks before last frost. Sowing too late pushes harvest into hard frost season before the crown reaches full size; sowing too early risks leggy, root-bound seedlings. Begin when late-winter days are noticeably lengthening and supplemental light is available.
- Days are visibly lengthening and late-winter sunlight strengthens on windowsills
- Seed catalogs and garlic sprouting indoors signal the active indoor-start season
- Forsythia is still weeks away from bloom in your region
Transplant
Celeriac tolerates light frost but not prolonged cold below 45°F, which can trigger premature bolting in juvenile plants. Transplant once soil is workable and nighttime temperatures are consistently above 40°F, typically 2-4 weeks before last frost. Transplanting too early into cold, wet soil stunts growth; too late compresses the long growing season.
- Dandelions beginning to bloom and soil surface drying between rain events
- Nighttime lows no longer dropping below 38-40°F for extended stretches
- Forsythia in full bloom or just past peak
- Soil works without clumping and warms to at least 50°F at 2-inch depth
Start Dates (Your Location)
Average dates use your saved zone; readiness also checks your forecast when available.
Average Last Frost
Set your growing zone to see personalized calendar dates.
Use the average timing, but check your local forecast before planting.
Typical Harvest Window
September to December
Organic Growing Tips
Organic Growing Tips
Side-dress with mature compost or worm castings at the base of each plant midseason to sustain the long growing season without forcing excessive top growth
Apply a 2-3 inch layer of straw mulch around plants in midsummer to retain consistent soil moisture and moderate soil temperature, which celeriac roots demand
Water with compost tea every 3-4 weeks during active growth to support soil biology and feed plants without harsh nutrient spikes
Trim outer leaf stalks that are yellowing or dying back to keep air circulation high and direct energy into crown development
Avoid high-nitrogen inputs after midsummer; excess nitrogen produces lush foliage at the expense of crown size and flavor
Allow the crown to experience light frost before final harvest to convert starches and deepen the characteristic nutty flavor
Care Guidance
Optional seasonal guidance for what you can do, even when nothing is urgent.
Care Guidance
Watering
If the top 2 inches of soil feel dry, a deep watering at the base may help more than frequent light watering. In healthy soil, rain may cover much of what it needs.
Feeding
If growth is strong, compost-rich soil often carries most of the load. If the plant starts looking pale or stalls, a light compost top-dressing or gentle organic feed may help.
Seasonal care
During the main season, harvesting when the crop is ready and removing damaged growth can help keep the planting productive if it starts to look crowded or tired.
Harvest timing
Harvests often cluster around September to December. If fruit, leaves, or roots start looking ready, color, size, firmness, and scent usually tell you more than the calendar alone.
Known Varieties
Common cultivars worth knowing
Known Varieties
Brilliant
A widely grown modern variety with a smooth, round crown and white interior that resists browning; relatively fast to mature for the type.
Best for
General home garden and cooking use
Giant Prague
An heirloom variety producing large, somewhat irregular crowns with robust flavor; reliable open-pollinated seed for seed-saving.
Best for
Heirloom gardens and storage
Monarch
A Dutch variety noted for its smooth skin and reduced lateral shoot production, which means less trimming during growth.
Best for
Growers wanting lower maintenance during the growing season
Ibis
An early-maturing variety suitable for shorter growing seasons; produces medium-sized crowns with good texture.
Best for
Cold climates with short summers
Common Pests
Common Pests
- aphids
- carrot fly
- celery leaf miner
- slugs
- leatherjackets
All pest management in Garden uses safe, organic, non-toxic methods only. No synthetic pesticides, ever.
Simple Ways to Use
Simple Ways to Use
Start here if you're not sure how to use this crop in the kitchen.
Quick recipes you can make right away
Roasted Celeriac Cubes
Trim and peel the bulb well, cut it into even cubes, toss with oil and salt, and roast at 425°F for 25 to 35 minutes until the edges brown and the centers turn tender. Stir once halfway through so the cubes roast instead of steaming.
Celeriac Mash
Peel and chop celeriac, boil it 20 to 25 minutes until the pieces break apart easily with a fork, then drain well and mash with butter and salt. Let extra steam escape for a minute before mashing so the puree stays thick instead of watery.
Celeriac Soup Base
Simmer peeled celeriac with onion and broth for 25 to 30 minutes until the pieces are fully soft, then blend until smooth. The soup is ready when no fibrous lumps remain and it coats a spoon lightly.
How to Preserve
How to Preserve
Use this section to store or process extra harvest before it spoils.
Practical methods for extra harvest
Store in damp packing material
Brush off loose soil and pack sound unwashed celeriac bulbs in barely damp sand, sawdust, or leaves in a cold place just above freezing. The packing material should feel lightly moist, not wet, so the bulbs stay firm without rotting.
Freeze blanched celeriac cubes
Peel and cube the bulb, blanch the pieces 2 minutes, then chill them fully in cold water so they stop cooking. Dry them well before freezing on a tray, then bag them once solid for soup, mash, or roasting.
Freeze cooked puree or soup
Boil celeriac chunks 20 to 30 minutes, or roast them at 400°F until a knife slides through with no resistance, then mash or blend them. Cool the puree completely before freezing in small containers, and portion it so you can thaw only what you need for soup or side dishes.
New to preserving food?
New to freezing? Read the freezing guide.How to Store
How to Store
Simple storage tips
Keep celeriac cold, dark, and slightly humid for the longest storage life, either in the refrigerator or another root-cellar-like space.
Do not wash the bulbs before storage, because extra moisture shortens their keeping quality.
Trim off leafy tops before storing, because they draw moisture from the bulb.
Use bulbs with soft spots, cracks, or shriveling first for soup or mash.
Packed in cold humid conditions, sound bulbs often keep 1 to 2 months before quality starts to drop.
How to Save Seed
How to Save Seed
Step-by-step seed saving
- 1
If the packet or tag says F1 hybrid, saved seed may not stay true. Open-pollinated celeriac is the better choice if you want similar bulbs next time.
- 2
Celeriac usually makes seed in its second year, so saving seed is a 2-year project rather than a one-season harvest.
- 3
Store a few strong bulbs through winter, replant them in spring, and let the flower heads dry until they turn tan and the seeds rub loose easily.
- 4
Cut the dry heads, finish drying them under cover if needed, and store the cleaned seed only when fully dry in a cool dry place.
Native Range
Native Range
- Origin
- Derived from wild celery native to the Mediterranean and western Europe.
- Native Habitat
- Coastal marshes, stream banks, and wet meadows in the Mediterranean and Europe.
- Current Distribution
- Cultivated widely in Europe and North America; a cool-season root vegetable prized in European cuisines.
Taxonomy
Taxonomy
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Family
- Carrot family (Apiaceae)
- Genus
- Apium
- Species
- Apium graveolens var. rapaceum
Morphology
Morphology
Root System
The edible portion is a swollen hypocotyl and upper taproot forming a dense, globular crown just at or above the soil surface; numerous fibrous roots and lateral shoots emerge from the bottom and sides of the crown and should be trimmed to direct energy into the central mass.
Stem
The hollow, ribbed green stems arise directly from the crown and are edible but strongly flavored; they can be chopped and used like celery stalks, though the main crop value is the root.
Leaves
Compound, dark green leaves resemble flat-leaf parsley and are aromatic when bruised; yellowing or dying outer leaves indicate nutrient stress or natural senescence and should be removed to improve airflow and discourage fungal disease.
Flowers
In its second year celeriac bolts to produce flat-topped white umbels typical of the Apiaceae family; bolting in the first season, triggered by cold exposure of young seedlings, ruins root development and should be prevented.
Fruit
Small ribbed seeds form in pairs after flowering; seed-saving from second-year plants is practical for the home gardener, though commercial and F1 varieties may not come true to type.
Natural History
Natural History
Celeriac is a cultivated variety of wild celery, Apium graveolens, native to marshy coastal regions around the Mediterranean and into western Asia. Wild celery was known to ancient Greeks and Romans as a bitter, aromatic plant associated with funerary rites and medicinal use; Homer references it in the Odyssey. The swollen-crown form was selectively developed in northern and central Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries, with the earliest clear horticultural descriptions appearing in European herbals of the 1600s. Unlike stalk celery, celeriac tolerates heavier clay soils and stores through winter, making it a staple of northern European kitchens.
Traditional Use
Traditional Use
The broader Apium graveolens species, including ancestors of celeriac, was documented in ancient Greek and Roman medical traditions as a diuretic and aromatic plant used in various preparations for digestive and urinary complaints. Medieval European herbalists listed celery-type plants in compilations such as the Capitulare de Villis under Charlemagne and later in herbals by Matthioli. Celeriac itself, as a distinct root form, was less prominent in historical medical literature than its stalk celery relatives.
Parts Noted Historically
Ancient Greek medicine, classical period - leaves and seeds
Greek physicians referenced selinon, a plant closely associated with the Apium genus, in contexts involving aromatic and cleansing properties, with leaves and seeds noted in dietary and medicinal records of the period.
Medieval European herbalism, 16th-century Italian herbals - root and seed
Pietro Andrea Mattioli's 16th-century commentary on Dioscorides described celery-type plants including the swollen root forms then being cultivated in Italy, noting their aromatic seeds and roots in the context of traditional European humoral medicine.
Celeriac and celery family plants contain furanocoumarins, which can cause photosensitive skin reactions in some individuals handling large quantities of fresh plant material. Those with Apiaceae allergies should exercise caution.
This information is provided for historical and educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions related to your health.
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