Everything You Need to Know About Growing Chives (2024)

Jayme Henderson

Jayme Henderson

Jayme is an aspiring wine-maker and Certified Sommelier, and when away from the restaurant, she can be found in the garden or the kitchen. She blogs at Holly & Flora, where she writes about cultivating, co*cktailing, and creating, from garden to glass.

updated Aug 12, 2022

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Everything You Need to Know About Growing Chives (1)

So, you might not consider yourself much of a home gardener, but you love to cook, and you go crazy over seasonally fresh flavor. This is where growing culinary herbs comes into play. Over the next few weeks, I’m going to show you how easy it is to grow your own herbs, whether you’re limited by time, space, money, or that highly coveted green thumb.

Let’s start this series with chives. They are one of the first herbs to pop up in the spring garden, they are

in season

Learn everything you need to know about how to plant, cultivate, harvest and preserve chives. I’m talking low-maintenance, high-yield, and

serious versatility.

Why Should I Grow Chives?

I tell my non-gardening friends that chives are the “gateway herb.” Because they are so easy to grow, chives build up a new gardener’s confidence, allowing for further exploration with growing other culinary herbs. Since they are perennials, they grow back each spring, and they are one of the first to arrive on the scene during the cooler season.

Chives (allium schoenoprasum) have a light onion flavor, and their hollow, green leaves grace our summer salads, soups, omelets, and almost anything else that needs a hint of garlic or an herbaceous punch. They are a classic match for potato salad, but they are versatile enough to work with almost any cuisine.

Did I mention the entire plant is edible? The leaves, blossoms, and even bulbs, to a lesser extent, all find uses in the kitchen. Pollinators are also attracted to chives’ vibrant, purple blossoms.

How to Plant Chives

  • Where: I plant my chives throughout my landscaping, so you’ll find chives along the walkway, within my wildflowers, and alongside my tomatoes and carrots. Chives also grow well in container gardens and thrive indoors on a sunny windowsill.
  • When: Set chive seedlings into your backyard garden or container garden, once the ground temperature hits at least 65°F. If you’re planting chives from seed, start them indoors, optimally, so they will have a head start on the growing season, once you’re ready to set them in the ground. Aim to sow the seeds indoors four to six weeks before the last projected frost and transplant them, when the seedlings are about two inches tall.

How to Cultivate Chives

  • Soil: Plant chives in fertile, well-drained soil. Integrate a little organic fertilizer or healthy compost into the soil and avoid over-fertilizing throughout the season, so you’ll obtain the best flavor.
  • Sun: Chives thrive in full sun, but they will grow almost anywhere. If you are growing chives indoors, place them in a south-facing window or a spot that receives at least six hours of sunshine.
  • Water: Keep the soil moist. Chives grow best when watered frequently, as long as there is proper soil drainage.
  • Spacing: Chives grow about 12 inches tall and spread about 12 inches across. When planting chives near each other, keep the bulbs at least six inches apart. Every three or four years, divide the bulbs, so that they keep proliferating.
  • Companion Planting: Plant chives alongside carrots, tomatoes, mustard greens, or cabbage. Chives actually repel carrot flies, aphids, and cabbage worms. This spring, I planted chives near my apple tree, since chives are known to prevent apple scab. Talk about putting your garden to work for you!

How to Harvest Chives

  • Leaves: Using garden shears, clip chive leaves, cutting one to two inches above the soil. Clip leaves from the outer portion of the plant first, making sure not to clip all of the plant at once. If you make a mistake and cut back all of the plant, no worries. It will grow back the following year. Wait to harvest your chives when the plant is at least six inches tall.
  • Blossoms: Clip the flower at the base of its stem. The stem is edible but is often tougher and “woodier” in taste than its leaves. Chives flower between May and June, and the blossoms are tasty in salads and in chive blossom vinegar.

How to Preserve Chives

Since the entire plant is edible, there are many exciting ways to preserve your chive harvest. Tomorrow, we’ll discuss various preservation techniques beyond the usual freezing and dehydrating.

Chives are the workhorse of my kitchen. I use them almost daily, and I find such satisfaction clipping a few leaves and tossing them in my omelet or atop my vegetable stir-fry at lunch. I’ve been growing them for years, and even when I forget about tending them, they still keep faithfully producing.

How do your chives perform? Do you grow them in the garden or in pots? What tips do you have to share?

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herbs

Ingredient

Everything You Need to Know About Growing Chives (2024)

FAQs

Everything You Need to Know About Growing Chives? ›

Chives thrive in full sun and well drained soil rich in organic matter. The easiest and most successful way of growing chives is planting rooted clumps in spring, after frost danger has passed. You can easily grow chives indoors in a bright, sunny location. Harvest chives by snipping leaves from the base of the plant.

How long do chives take to fully grow? ›

Chives are ready to harvest as soon as the leaves are long enough to clip and use in the kitchen. Cut the chives from the outside of the clump, leave a half-inch of stem, Chives are ready to harvest typically 60 days after planting the seeds.

What not to plant with chives? ›

Avoid putting garlic chives near asparagus, peas, spinach and beans, as they will compete for similar soil nutrients (3). Regular harvesting (by clipping the leaves of the plant) will promote more vigorous growth and spreading behavior.

Should I let my chives flower? ›

Should you really let your chives bolt? Well, there's really no harm in letting your chives bloom, but your harvest might get smaller if you do. Most plants will produce smaller leaves when there are flowers too. The flower stalk is usually also hard and you can't eat it.

Can you eat chives after they flower? ›

Chive flowers are more than pretty little puffballs; these edible flowers can add a delicate savory flavor to all kinds of recipes. But you'd better act quickly because their season is fleeting.

Are chives worth growing? ›

This popular perennial herb is easy to grow and has many benefits in the kitchen as well as in the garden. Chives are the delicately flavored, less onion-y herb in the onion family — Allium — that are used to enhance salads, soups, stews, eggs, vegetables and sauces.

Will chives come back every year? ›

Are Chives a Perennial Plant? Chives are a cold-hardy little perennial that will return from the roots each year. If you experience a cold season (during which you can regularly expect frost or snow), your chives will die back in the winter but then return on their own in the spring—a welcome sight every year!

Do chives spread in the garden? ›

Bringing chives under cover for winter use is a good excuse to make some new plants for free, so instead of bringing the whole plant indoors, divide the clump instead. Chives can spread out and lose vigor over time, so dividing the plant every few years helps to keep it compact and productive too.

Are coffee grounds good for chives? ›

As well as compost, coffee grounds are also great for fertilising chive plants, as they provide essential nutrients while keeping the soil slightly acidic.

What is chives best companion? ›

Planting marigolds around chives can help protect them from infestation while adding vibrant color to the garden. Nasturtiums (Tropaeolum majus): Nasturtiums are great companions for chives because they deter pests like aphids, whiteflies, and cucumber beetles, which can damage chive plants.

Do chives attract bugs? ›

Chives deter aphids, mites, and Japanese beetles, as well as rabbits — a more significant garden pest. Sort of “the original” for bug repelling, with an overpowering lemony scent.

Do I deadhead chives? ›

After flowering, to keep chives looking neat, remove the faded heads, cutting and removing the tough, inedible flower stalks right at the base.

Do chives multiply? ›

Chives are easy to grow, and they multiply quickly. They are hardy in zones 3 through 10 and can winter inside for year-round use. If you have a neighbor or friend with chives, get a start from them (a small portion of the plant and roots) and plant in late spring or early summer.

Can you harvest chives more than once? ›

Begin harvesting chive leaves about 30 days after you transplant or 60 days after seeding. Be sure to cut the leaves down to the base when harvesting (within 1 to 2 inches of the soil). Harvest 3 to 4 times during the first year. In subsequent years, cut plants back monthly.

How to keep chives fresh after cutting? ›

Dry Chives In a Dehydrator
  1. Wash and pat dry chives.
  2. Cut to desired size.
  3. Line dehydrator tray with Paraflex sheet, silicone or parchment paper.
  4. Spread cut chives in even layer on sheet. ...
  5. Dehydrate at 95-125°F or 35-52°C for 2 to 4 hours. ...
  6. Let cool completely, then store in an airtight jar for 3-6 months.
Jun 8, 2022

What to do with chives after cutting? ›

It's incredibly easy to freeze fresh chives, so you can preserve the harvest whenever you have a glut of this flavourful herb. Line a baking tray with baking paper and leave aside. Gently wash and pat dry fresh herbs to remove dirt or grit.

How often can you cut chives? ›

Chives are best cut throughout the growing season. However, do not remove too many stalks at once, otherwise the chive plant may die. For a more plentiful chive harvest, it is advisable to grow several plants at once. In autumn, chive leaves will begin to dry and fall off the plant.

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