Sorrel
HerbRumex acetosa
Have seeds for this? Add to inventory →Sorrel is a hardy perennial herb with broad, arrow-shaped leaves and an intense, bright lemon-sour flavour from oxalic acid that is like no other garden green. It thrives with minimal care, emerges very early in spring, and provides fresh, intensely flavoured leaves for months. French sorrel (Rumex scutatus) has smaller leaves with a milder, more lemony flavour and is preferred by many cooks for fine cuisine. Sorrel is the foundational flavour of classic French sorrel soup.

Growing Conditions
Growing Conditions
Sunlight
Full Sun to Partial Shade
Water Needs
Low to Moderate
Soil
Well-draining loam; tolerates a wide range of soils including clay and poor soils; pH 5.5 - 7.0; avoid waterlogged conditions
Spacing
12 - 18 inches
Days to Maturity
60 - 70 days from seed to first significant harvest; established plants available from early spring
Growing Zones
Growing Zones
Thrives in USDA Zones 4 - 9
When to Plant
When to Plant
Start Indoors
4 - 6 weeks before last frost
Direct Sow
Direct sow as soon as soil can be worked in early spring; sorrel tolerates hard frosts
Harvest
Harvest young leaves as needed throughout the growing season; remove flower stalks as soon as they appear to redirect energy to leaf production; large, older leaves become coarser and more bitter
Phenology (Natural Timing Cues)
Direct Sow
Sorrel is one of the most cold-tolerant herbs for spring sowing - it can be direct-sown while there is still frost risk and will germinate in cool soil. Established clumps emerge and are ready to harvest very early in spring, sometimes before anything else in the garden. Once established, divide clumps every 3-4 years to maintain vigor.
- Soil can be worked; any time from late winter through spring.
- Cool-season weeds are germinating.
- Snowdrops or crocuses are blooming (early planting is fine).
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
Early spring
Use the seasonal timing note for this plant.
Typical Harvest Window
March to October
Organic Growing Tips
Organic Growing Tips
Remove flower stalks immediately as they develop to maintain the most productive leaf growth; plants allowed to flower and set seed decline quickly.
Divide large clumps every 3-4 years in early spring to rejuvenate production; replant divisions into improved soil.
Slug damage is most significant in wet conditions; use diatomaceous earth or copper tape barriers around plants in slug-prone gardens.
In warm zones, cut plants back hard in midsummer when heat causes stress; they will re-grow vigorously in the cooler temperatures of autumn.
Care Guidance
Optional seasonal guidance for what you can do, even when nothing is urgent.
Care Guidance
Watering
If dry weather lingers, let the top 2 inches start to dry before watering again. This plant often responds better to an occasional deep soak than to frequent light watering.
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
In late fall, a light cleanup and fresh mulch can help if winter protection is useful in your climate. Leaving a little space around crowns and trunks often helps air move and keeps excess moisture from sitting there.
Harvest timing
Harvests often cluster around March to October. 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
French Sorrel (R. scutatus)
Smaller, shield-shaped leaves with a finer, more lemony flavor than common sorrel; preferred in French classical cuisine. Slightly more heat-tolerant.
Best for
Fine cooking; delicate flavor; pairing with fish and sauces
Blood-veined Sorrel (R. sanguineus)
Ornamental variety grown for its vivid red-veined leaves; milder flavor than common sorrel. Also called Red-veined or Bloody Dock.
Best for
Ornamental use in mixed borders; mild edible green
Large French (Broad-leaf)
Selected form of common sorrel with particularly large, thick leaves; higher yield and good flavor for culinary use.
Best for
Maximum leaf production; general cooking
Companion Planting
Companion Planting
Good companions
Support & insectary plants
Nearby plants that attract pollinators, beneficial insects, or improve soil health.
Avoid planting near
No known conflicts
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 Sorrel Salad
Wash and dry young sorrel leaves well, then mix them with milder greens so the tart flavor does not overwhelm the bowl. Dress just before serving so the leaves stay fresh instead of collapsing too quickly.
Sorrel Soup Stir-In
Add chopped sorrel to hot soup for the last 1 to 2 minutes until the leaves wilt fully and the broth takes on the herb flavor's lemony bite. Add it near the end so the flavor stays bright instead of dulling in long cooking.
Quick Sorrel Saute
Cook sorrel in a skillet with a little butter for 30 to 60 seconds until the leaves collapse into a soft green tangle. Take it off the heat as soon as it wilts, because it cooks down very quickly.
How to Preserve
How to Preserve
Use this section to store or process extra harvest before it spoils.
Practical methods for extra harvest
Freeze cooked sorrel
Saute or steam sorrel until just wilted, cool it completely, and freeze it in small portions. Use it later in soup, eggs, or sauce, because thawed sorrel is too soft for salad.
Freeze sorrel puree
Cook sorrel briefly until wilted, blend it into a simple puree, and freeze it in small containers or ice-cube trays. Freeze in small portions so you can thaw only what you need for soup or sauces.
Dry sorrel for cooking
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 leaves for cooked dishes only, because fresh sorrel has a much brighter flavor.
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 sorrel cold in the refrigerator and use it within about 2 to 4 days, because the leaves wilt quickly after harvest.
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 the leaves are very dirty, because wet sorrel turns slimy faster.
Use older leaves in soups or sautés first, because they are often stronger and less tender than young leaves.
Discard leaves that smell sour in a spoiled way or feel slick instead of fresh and tart.
How to Save Seed
How to Save Seed
Step-by-step seed saving
- 1
Let a few plants send up seed stalks and wait until the seed clusters turn brown and dry on the plant.
- 2
Cut the dry stalks into a paper bag and let them sit several more days if the weather has been humid.
- 3
Rub or shake the dry clusters gently to release the seeds, then remove the larger dry pieces.
- 4
Store the fully dry seed in a cool dry place in a labeled packet or jar.
Native Range
Native Range
- Origin
- Native to temperate Europe, western Asia, and North Africa; naturalized across North America, Australia, and many temperate regions worldwide after introduction.
- Native Habitat
- Grasslands, meadows, woodland edges, roadsides, and disturbed ground in temperate climates; tolerates a wide range of soil conditions.
- Current Distribution
- Naturalized across North America, South America, Australia, and New Zealand; cultivated globally as a culinary herb.
Taxonomy
Taxonomy
- Kingdom
- Plantae
- Family
- Buckwheat family (Polygonaceae)
- Genus
- Rumex
- Species
- Rumex acetosa
Morphology
Morphology
Root System
Deep taproot with fibrous laterals; the taproot makes established plants very drought-tolerant and allows spring emergence before most other perennials. Clumps expand slowly by root division.
Stem
Upright, hollow flower stalks 18-36 inches tall when allowed to bolt; vegetative growth is a basal rosette of leaves on short stalks.
Leaves
Arrow- to spear-shaped leaves 2-6 inches long with two distinctive backward-pointing lobes at the base (hastate base); bright to medium green with reddish veins on some plants. Leaves are fleshy and crisp when young.
Flowers
Small, reddish-brown flowers on branching stalks in late spring-summer; dioecious in some populations (male and female flowers on separate plants). Flower stalks should be removed before opening to maintain leaf production.
Fruit
Small, winged nutlets produced in large quantities on plants allowed to flower; self-sows readily in garden conditions.
Natural History
Natural History
Common Sorrel (Rumex acetosa) is native to temperate grasslands and woodland edges across Europe, western Asia, and North Africa, where it has been gathered and eaten for thousands of years. It was cultivated in ancient Egypt and classical Greece, and is documented in Roman and medieval European kitchen gardens. The name "sorrel" comes from an Old French word meaning "sour," reflecting its most obvious characteristic. French sorrel (Rumex scutatus), also called buckler sorrel, is native to mountains and rocky slopes across southern Europe and western Asia; it has smaller, shield-shaped leaves with a finer, less harsh sourness and has been cultivated in French kitchen gardens since at least the Middle Ages. Both species were brought to North America by European colonists and have naturalized in many areas. The great French chef Auguste Escoffier helped codify sorrel as a classic French culinary ingredient in the late 19th and early 20th centuries; sorrel sauce with salmon and sorrel soup (potage germiny) became the signatures of its use in haute cuisine. Sorrel was also historically important as one of the very first spring foods available after winter - its cold hardiness and early emergence made it a valued source of fresh greens before other garden plants were ready.
Traditional Use
Traditional Use
Sorrel has a documented history in European herbal medicine primarily for digestive, cooling, and diuretic applications. Its high vitamin C content made it historically important as an anti-scurvy food, particularly in spring when fresh vegetables were otherwise unavailable after winter.
Parts Noted Historically
Classical Greek and Roman medicine - Leaves
Dioscorides described sorrel in De Materia Medica as a cooling, diuretic herb useful for digestive complaints. Pliny the Elder noted it for stomach ailments and as a general cooling herb appropriate in fevers. These uses reflected the Hippocratic understanding of sorrel as a "cold" and "moist" plant that could balance "hot" and "dry" constitutions.
European spring vitamin C tradition - Leaves
Before the modern understanding of vitamin C, European peasant communities across the continent recognized that eating sorrel leaves in spring reduced the weakness, bleeding gums, and skin problems that accumulated over winter - symptoms now recognized as mild scurvy. Wild sorrel was gathered from meadows and roadsides as one of the first vitamin-C-rich spring greens. Nicholas Culpeper's Complete Herbal (1652) noted sorrel for cooling fevers, quenching thirst, and "strengthening the heart."
Sorrel contains significant oxalic acid and should not be eaten in large quantities regularly. Individuals with kidney stones (especially oxalate stones), gout, rheumatoid arthritis, or kidney disease should avoid or severely limit sorrel intake. Cooking reduces but does not eliminate oxalic acid content. Children and pregnant women should eat sorrel only in small quantities. In normal culinary use as a flavoring herb, sorrel is safe for most healthy adults.
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.
Loading photo submission…
