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How to grow coriander, culantro

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  • How to grow coriander, culantro

    I've seen people grow coriander successfully on YouTube, read articles, tried to follow what they do eg lightly crushing the seeds, wrapping up in a damp cotton towel, or simply sowing as normal in a pot and outside. Outside in different spots to see if it helps.

    But nothing works for me. If it germinates, it's a spindly thing that might give off a couple leaves before bolting into flower.

    I've ordered different varieties this time, including a culantro. Any herb that tastes similar, and that I can grow, would be great.

    Any advice would be great.
    Northwest outside Liverpool

  • #2
    Coriander can bolt quickly in hot weather - maybe try an earlier sowing? It's too early for sowing outside now but I'd be tempted by a Feb/March sowing on a windowsill indoors if you have space.

    Edit to add: I've never done anything fancy with my seed - just indoors to start off, in a small pot of compost with a bag over the top which I take off when they sprout. Depending on how much you use/want, you could do a second or even third sowing indoors/outdoors later. I try to keep mine out of mid-day sun when they've moved outside.
    Last edited by Andraste; 28-01-2026, 12:28 PM.
    Location: SE Wales about 1250ft up

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    • #3
      Originally posted by KJessi View Post
      coriander...... Any advice would be great.
      If it helps I’ve been told if it’s leaves rather than seeds you want not to treat coriander as a traditional herb so much as a cool-season annual salad crop like baby lettuce – i.e. cool conditions, dappled shade, steady moisture, regular re-sowings etc. Also if you pick SOME choice leaves from several plants the plants will think (understandably!) they are under attack and rush to reproduce (bolt/seed)… So to harvest leaves it’s better to sow quite thickly, grow plants as juveniles (12-15cms tall rather than larger specimen plants) and crop one whole plant each time rather than select leaves from several plants. You can either yank the whole plant out roots-an-all and leave space for its neighbour to grow, or cut near ground level and leave the root to try again. Longer day-length and warmer temperatures encourage rushing to seed so it tends to do best (for leaves) in Spring and Autumn. Hope that helps!
      I was amused to learn the name ‘coriander’ comes from Greek ‘koris’ meaning ‘bedbug’ and to some folk it will taste like soap. So coriander is a bit of a mixed blessing!


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