Miner's Lettuce
VegetableClaytonia perfoliata
Have seeds for this? Add to inventory →Miner's lettuce is a cool-season native annual salad green of western North America, producing distinctive round leaves that completely encircle the flowering stem, giving the plant a striking and unmistakable appearance. Mild, succulent, and tender, the leaves are excellent raw in salads or lightly steamed. The plant thrives in cool, shaded conditions where most salad crops struggle, and self-sows prolifically to create a reliable early spring and winter salad patch with minimal effort.

Growing Conditions
Growing Conditions
Sunlight
Partial Shade
Water Needs
Moderate
Soil
Moist, well-drained soil rich in organic matter; tolerates light sandy soil; pH 5.5 - 7.0
Spacing
4 - 6 inches; self-sows to form dense patches
Days to Maturity
40 - 50 days from sowing to first harvest
Growing Zones
Growing Zones
Thrives in USDA Zones 4 - 9
When to Plant
When to Plant
Direct Sow
Scatter sow in autumn for winter-to-spring harvest, or in early spring while soil is still cool; barely cover seeds with fine soil
Harvest
Cut whole plants at soil level or harvest outer leaves as cut-and-come-again; harvest before flowers fully open for best flavour
Phenology (Natural Timing Cues)
Direct Sow
Sow in autumn for winter and early spring harvest, or very early spring as soon as soil is workable. Miner's lettuce germinates and grows in cool, shaded conditions that other salad crops cannot tolerate.
- Soil temperature is 45 - 65°F; the plant germinates best in cool conditions.
- Autumn sowing: 6 or more weeks before first frost, or in mild climates through early winter.
- Spring sowing: as soon as soil is workable, even if nights still frost.
- Heat above 75°F will cause rapid bolting; time sowings to avoid warm conditions.
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.
Direct Sow Window
Early spring
This uses autumn or first-frost timing, so keep the planting note as written.
Typical Harvest Window
February, March, April, October, November, December
Organic Growing Tips
Organic Growing Tips
Grow in partial shade to extend the season; direct sun causes rapid bolting as temperatures rise.
Allow some plants to go to seed each season; the plant self-sows reliably and requires almost no replanting.
Use as a ground cover under fruit trees and shrubs in winter and early spring when the ground would otherwise be bare.
Harvest young plants entirely by cutting at the base rather than picking individual leaves for the fastest regrowth.
Sow in early autumn in mild climates for a salad patch that produces through winter with zero maintenance.
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
Extra feeding is rarely required if soil is healthy. If growth looks pale or slow, a light compost top-dressing is often enough before adding anything stronger.
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 February, March, April, October, November, 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
Straight Species
No named cultivars exist; the wild species is the garden plant. Regional ecotypes vary slightly in leaf size and season length.
Best for
Winter salad garden, woodland understory planting, self-sowing cool-season green
Companion Planting
Companion Planting
Common Pests
Common Pests
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
Fresh Miners Lettuce Salad
Wash and dry the leaves well, then toss them with oil, lemon juice, and a pinch of salt right before serving. Dress the leaves only when dry so the salad stays crisp instead of watery.
Miners Lettuce Bowl Mix-In
Layer miners lettuce with milder salad greens or herbs so its delicate texture is not crushed by heavier ingredients. Add any dressing at the last minute, because the leaves soften quickly once dressed.
Quick Wilted Miners Lettuce
Add the leaves to a warm pan for 30 to 60 seconds until they just begin to wilt, then remove them from the heat. Keep the cooking brief so the plant stays tender instead of collapsing into mush.
How to Preserve
How to Preserve
Use this section to store or process extra harvest before it spoils.
Practical methods for extra harvest
Freeze blanched miners lettuce
Blanch the leaves 30 seconds, chill them fully in cold water, then squeeze out extra moisture and freeze in small portions. Use the frozen greens in soups or egg dishes, because they are too soft for salad after thawing.
Dry miners lettuce for soup flakes
Spread clean leaves in a thin layer and dry them at low heat or in a warm airy place until they crumble easily and no stem piece feels cool or flexible, usually several days depending on humidity. Store the dried flakes for cooked dishes only, because fresh miners lettuce is much better raw.
New to preserving food?
New to freezing? Read the freezing guide.New to dehydrating? Read the dehydrating guide.How to Store
How to Store
Simple storage tips
Keep miners lettuce cold in the refrigerator and use it within about 2 to 3 days, because it has a very short fresh-storage window.
Store it dry in a bag or container lined with a towel so extra moisture does not sit on the leaves.
Wash only before using unless it is very dirty, because wet leaves turn slimy quickly.
Use any older or slightly wilted leaves first in soups or quick sautés.
Harvest modestly and often, because miners lettuce is best when young and tender.
How to Save Seed
How to Save Seed
Step-by-step seed saving
- 1
Let some plants flower and dry fully until the seed capsules turn tan and the seeds inside darken.
- 2
Cut the dry plants into a paper bag and let them sit several more days if the weather has been humid.
- 3
Shake or crumble the dry stems gently to release the seeds, then remove the larger dry pieces.
- 4
Store the fully dry seed in a cool dry place, or let some fall in place because miners lettuce self-sows readily.
Native Range
Native Range
- Origin
- Native to western North America, from British Columbia south through the Pacific coast states to Baja California and eastward through the mountain states.
- Native Habitat
- Moist, shaded woodland clearings, streambanks, disturbed ground, and grassy slopes in partial to full shade; thrives in cool, damp conditions.
- Current Distribution
- Native to western North America; naturalized widely in Europe and elsewhere as a garden escape and weed of disturbed ground.
Taxonomy
Taxonomy
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Family
- Miner's lettuce family (Montiaceae)
- Genus
- Claytonia
- Species
- perfoliata
Morphology
Morphology
Root System
Slender taproot; a small annual with no significant root system beyond anchoring; pulls easily from moist soil.
Stem
Slender succulent stems 4 - 12 inches tall; distinctive upper stem appears to pass through the centre of a circular fused leaf disc (perfoliate leaf).
Leaves
Two types: basal leaves are long-stalked, spoon-shaped, and tender; upper stem leaves fuse completely around the stem to form a distinctive circular disc 1 - 3 inches across, with the stem appearing to grow through the centre.
Flowers
Tiny white 5-petalled flowers produced in a raceme emerging from the centre of the perfoliate leaf disc; 2 - 4mm across; flowering triggers quality decline in the leaves.
Fruit
Tiny capsule containing 1 - 3 small black seeds; produced in abundance; self-sows readily in suitable conditions.
Natural History
Natural History
Claytonia perfoliata is named for John Clayton (1694 - 1773), one of colonial America's most important botanists and a pioneering collector of Virginia's flora. The common name miner's lettuce dates specifically to the California Gold Rush of 1848 - 1855, when the plant was gathered by forty-niners as a vitamin C-rich fresh green during the California winter - a crucial antiscorbutic food when fresh vegetables were otherwise unavailable in the mining camps of the Sierra Nevada foothills. The plant is native to cool, moist woodland environments of western North America, and its range and preferences ideally suited it to the shaded, damp conditions of the California winter that miners found so challenging to farm in. Indigenous peoples of California and the Pacific Northwest, including the Coast Miwok, Pomo, and many other nations, had long gathered and eaten the plant before European contact. The perfoliate leaves - in which the leaf blade completely surrounds and appears to be pierced by the stem - are botanically unusual and give the plant its unmistakable appearance. This structure develops as the plant approaches flowering and represents the fusion of a pair of opposite leaves around the stem. Claytonia perfoliata has proven highly adaptable as a garden escape: it naturalized across much of northern and western Europe following its introduction as a curiosity and food plant in the 19th century, and is now common in disturbed ground, woodland edges, and shaded gardens across Britain, France, Germany, and the Netherlands.
Traditional Use
Traditional Use
Miner's lettuce was used primarily as food rather than formal medicine by the Indigenous peoples of California and the Pacific Northwest, who knew the plant as a seasonal spring green of considerable importance. Its primary historical medicinal relevance is as an antiscorbutic - a source of vitamin C - which gave it real practical health value in the context of the Gold Rush period and Indigenous winter food systems. Some California Indigenous groups used the plant in minor ways as a topical preparation, but the primary tradition is culinary.
Parts Noted Historically
Coast Miwok and Pomo peoples, California, pre-colonial through 19th century - Leaves and stems
Ethnobotanical records document miner's lettuce as a gathered spring green among numerous California Indigenous nations. The plant was eaten raw and lightly cooked as a seasonal vegetable, providing fresh greens during the cool, wet California winter and early spring. No specialized medicinal use separate from its food role is clearly distinguished in the ethnobotanical record.
California Gold Rush mining communities, 1848 - 1855 - Whole plant
The Gold Rush gave the plant its English common name. Miners working in the Sierra Nevada foothills gathered miner's lettuce through the California winter as a salad green and recognized it as a preventative against the scurvy symptoms that plagued camps with poor food variety. This informal but effective use of a native plant as an antiscorbutic is documented in period diaries and mining camp accounts.
Miner's lettuce is safe as food in any culinary quantity. It is one of the mildest and most nutritionally benign of wild greens, with no known toxic compounds. Very large quantities eaten raw contain oxalic acid at levels common to many greens; cooking reduces this. People with kidney stones sometimes restrict high-oxalate foods generally.
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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