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Saving Celery Seeds From the Garden & Their Health Benefits

4.9KViews Modified: May 5, 2024 · Published: Sep 13, 2012
By Jacqueline 23 Comments

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Saving Celery Seeds From the Garden & Their Health Benefits, regrowing celery, saving celery seed, celery flowers, health benefits, cool weather plant, bog plant, cuttings from celery, garden DIY, frugal living, healthy living, lowering blood pressure, aid flow of breast milk, freshen breath, bog plants, seed savers, gardening

You can harvest celery seeds if you can grow it. It is so simple and you can do this with many of the plants you may already be growing in your garden.

Do you remember this spring when I posted that you could regrow celery? Well, yes you can, but there are some things to know first!

1.) When you cut the bottom of the bunch of celery off (see above link) , let little rootlets form first by setting it in a dish of water for a few days. Then plant it outside. No rootlets = no growth!

2.) It needs a LOT of water. I had read that it was a bog plant originally, and it loves those conditions. A drip system would be totally helpful for celery (along with your cabbages). Next year?!

3.) They might have thrived in a bit of shade. Sun is fine, but the hot sun we had this summer (90-107° every day for almost two months) just increased the need for water. I lost several that way.

4.) I could have cut lots of celery leaf to flavor chicken salad, potatoes, and soups, but I was afraid it would hurt the growth of the plant.

Note: I do NOT get big, juicy stalks but have to content myself happy to use the leafy tops with about 3″ of stalk. More just grows from the crown of the plant.

5.) If I’m lucky, the plant goes to seed, and I collect seed before I tear the plants out in the fall. Here’s how it works:

In order to get to the seed stage, just let the celery plants you have go “to head”. That means you can still pick leaves and the mini-stalks, but don’t cut back the lanky stalks that shoot up from the heart (middle) of the plant. For me, here in the Midwest, they started to set seed in late August.

Eventually, the stalks will have flowers very much like Queen Anne’s lace.

Butterflies love them.

They will smell exactly like celery~ so lovely and fresh!

celery going to seed, flower stage

The petals will fall, and the developing seed will swell and start to age.

 Saving Celery Seeds From the Garden & Their Health Benefits.. bog plants

Here you can see several stages of seed development. It is quite lovely when you get up close. Little stripes become defined, better than the store-bought kind (what I had in the spice cabinet looked crushed)!!

The aroma of celery intensifies now and makes one hungry for potato salad or such 😉

stages of seed formation

When the celery seeds start to darken, take care not to shake them as you cut. Catch the seed heads into a bag or bowl. I found they want to drop off if the weather has been excessively hot and dry. If it has rained, wait for a dry day to collect the seed.

Store celery seeds in a tin or the spice shaker of your choice, and enjoy this appetite-stimulating seed. Is it a spice? Or an herb?

Celery Seeds Health Benefits:

Celery seeds are used as a diuretic. People who are suffering from gout and arthritis may find celery seed helpful, as the diuretic properties promotes the clearing of uric acid crystals collecting in the joints. They are also anti-inflammatory, helping to reduce the swelling and pain.

They have the ability to lower blood pressure and cholesterol, aid milk flow in nursing mothers, and freshen breath. Avoid in pregnancy if you are experiencing bleeding.

For a great little site on nutrition, go to nutrition-info.com.

Saving Celery Seeds From the Garden & Their Health Benefits. pinterest image

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Hi! I’m Jacqueline!

Thanks for being part of this journey with me.
Welcome to my own little place on the internet! Home is where I love to be. I feel there is no greater place to incubate souls. These days you’ll find me using my experiences here to write about herbal remedies and natural health research — a big passion of mine. But being a wife and mother is not easy. It is challenging and potentially lonely. I get that. I wanted to create a place to connect with and support other moms for creating a natural, healthy, and fulfilling home life.
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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Sandra

    September 13, 2012 at 5:46 pm

    I tried letting mine go to seed last year but didn’t have the room to see it all the way through. Hoping to do it with this years crop (which goes in next month in our area). Also, I forget of celery seed having medicinal properties, thanks for reminding me.

    Reply
  2. LindaG

    September 13, 2012 at 8:40 pm

    Great post. Thanks for the additional information!

    Reply
  3. Charlotte Moore

    September 13, 2012 at 9:47 pm

    We tried twice to grow a stalk of celery, but no luck. First in direct sun, next time in a shade. I wondered if it would grow now.

    That is such a pretty pink dish you have those seeds in. Pink catches my eyes.

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      September 14, 2012 at 12:51 pm

      I really love raspberry pink! Charlotte, don’t give up on trying…did you put the bottom of the stalk into water first to let little rootlets grow? It needs to have them form first and then lots and lots of water. I don’t think you can drown it 😉 Blessings, friend!

      Reply
      • Charlotte Moore

        September 16, 2012 at 11:49 pm

        Yes, I had it in water until the tops looked like it was making celery. I guess it needed more water.

        Reply
        • Jacqueline

          September 17, 2012 at 11:08 am

          Yes, Charlotte,
          I think I killed several that way by not letting the roots get longer and then flooding the dirt in the garden during the drought. I learned so much about the elusive celery plant this summer, and I’m not going to give up now 😉 Lol Will you try again?

          Reply
  4. Wendy @ E1A

    September 14, 2012 at 4:29 am

    So much knowledge re: God’s creation to glean from this blog Jacqueline!

    I just love your photos too – such beautiful photography!

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      September 14, 2012 at 12:49 pm

      Thank you, Wendy, for your kind words. God makes it so easy to love all of the work of His commands 🙂 I do love to take pictures, but there is so much to learn with the SLRs~ I don’t think I’ll ever get there!

      Reply
  5. Kim Smith

    September 14, 2012 at 8:24 am

    We tried to grow celery this summer here in SE IN. Not one seed germinated, not one. I was very disappointed. None of my pepper seeds from the same company germinated either. I’m not sure if it was the seed, the weather conditions or the gardener,lol. I’m going to try again next year. I learned a lot from your post!

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      September 14, 2012 at 12:46 pm

      Kim,
      Please do try again next year and instead of seed, save the bottom of the bunches you buy in the store. I don’t really know anyone who can grow celery easily except the producers. Lol I would love to hear of your success next year 🙂

      Reply
  6. Petra

    September 15, 2012 at 2:12 pm

    Praise God for His marvelous creation–and for you posting all the interesting, uniquely beautiful things about it. I find it so satisfying, so comforting that everything He made has a purpose…including us.

    The health benefits of celery are truly fascinating. Over time, I hope to build up to using herbs as much as possible in place of medications and such. God’s curing is so much purer than man’s. And celery is downright pretty when it’s growing. Blessings to you and your family!

    Reply
  7. Julie

    October 01, 2012 at 11:54 pm

    I grew a beautiful celery this summer from a supermarket stump that I started in a dish of water. I was so thrilled with its leafy lushness until I went to harvest it. It had grown one huge central “trunk” (like a forearm) and only a few tiny side shoots. It was nothing at all like the original celery I had purchased. Then I tasted it. Ugh, it was celery flavored times a thousand. It was inedible for snacking and maybe a little sliver could be used for soup flavor. Do you have any idea what went wrong? Is compost bad for them? I garden with absolutely no chemicals and only the goodness of sheep and chicken compost.
    Enjoyed your article here. Next time I will wait and harvest seeds!

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      October 02, 2012 at 10:07 am

      Julie,
      I am wondering if the center stalk was the seed-bearing stalk and it would taste different (and possibly horrid)…do keep trying, and I’d love to know if you can use the shorter stalks and leaves with success. Blessings to you and your household!

      Reply
  8. Mary

    September 07, 2016 at 8:05 am

    Are the packs of sowing celery seeds alright to use as an infusion to drink .
    Are they the same as the ones form a health shop please . Thank you

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      September 07, 2016 at 12:41 pm

      Hi, Mary! I hope I understand your question. This is what I think of the topic, but I am not a professional:
      Celery seed tea contains beneficial oils and active components, including essential omega-6 fatty acids and polyunsaturated fats that help lower cholesterol. I would NOT use standard celery seed for the garden, UNLESS you grow it your self and it is not sprayed. Most seed (unless organic) is treated before packaging. Here are examples of an organic celery seed: http://amzn.to/2cdBw48

      Celery seed tea is made by grinding or crushing celery seeds, pouring boiling water over them, then letting them steep for at least 10 minutes but preferably 20 minutes. Then you strain out the seeds and drink the tea. It takes about 2 tsp. of crushed seeds to make 2 cups of tea.

      I hope that helps 😀

      Reply
      • Mary

        September 07, 2016 at 1:51 pm

        Dear Jaqueline, thank you so much for your reply
        Re’ celery seeds. I shall stop using what I have made out of the sowing seeds at once.
        I shall go to a health shop and buy.
        Once again I thank you for your advise
        Yours sincerely mary X

        Reply
  9. Kristin Trowbridge

    July 05, 2020 at 11:16 am

    Hi! Thank you for your post! Can I use the celery seeds I harvest to plant seedlings next year? And if so, do I need to store them differently than I would if I were using them as a spice?

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      July 05, 2020 at 5:38 pm

      Hi, Kristin!
      Yes, you certainly can! I have done it before with varied success. They will need a good bit of moisture, even irrigation. It helps that we have a little afternoon sun so it is not so hot and dry!
      I hope that helps! I think experimenting is a good thing to find what works with your soil, rainfall, and such.
      Blessings, ~J

      Reply
  10. Jeannine Horton

    August 22, 2020 at 3:37 pm

    How do you separate the seeds from all the tiny beetles and other tiny bugs in the seeds??

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      August 22, 2020 at 7:09 pm

      Jeannine, I have never had bugs in the seeds. Hopefully, you won’t either!
      The seed clusters are pretty tight and no bugs could get in theorem, at least I have never seen a one.
      We garden organically and have a really good beneficial bug population and so don’t have many pests, fortunately.
      I hope that helps. ~Jacqueline

      Reply
    • Jacqueline

      August 22, 2020 at 7:14 pm

      Jeannine, normally, there shouldn’t be any on the seed heads. I’ve never had any seriously bug issues when I’ve harvested seeds.
      We garden organically and have a healthy beneficial insect population, so that keeps pests in check pretty well.
      I hope that helps,
      Jacqueline

      Reply
  11. Tina

    May 05, 2024 at 4:27 pm

    Thank you for the post. Because celery is biennial, do you leave the stalk planted over the winter to get seed? If so, do you cut it down or cover the plant over the winter?
    My first time growing celery. I have stared it from seed and plan on planting next weekend in the beds.

    Reply
    • Jacqueline

      May 05, 2024 at 5:43 pm

      Tina, you are welcome.
      That celery that went to head was from re-growing and planting a celery base like this: https://deeprootsathome.com/re-growing-celery-from-cuttings/
      I still can’t plant celery, but can re-grow the base and hopefully I can get another to send up a seed stalk and get seeds for my potato salads!
      Enjoy!
      ~Jacque

      Reply

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