Snowball - Organic Cauliflower Seeds

SKU: VCR101
Open-Pollinated
Certified Organic
Heirloom
Price:$5.65
Choose size

🚚 FREE SHIPPING for all orders over $79!

Snowball is a classic heirloom cauliflower known for tight, snowy-white heads wrapped by protective leaves that help keep the curds clean and bright. Selected by market growers in the late 1800s, it’s compact enough for small beds yet dependable in cool weather, producing uniform, medium heads with mild, sweet, slightly nutty flavor.

Roast into caramelized florets, steam for a silky mash, or quick-pickle small pieces for crunch. Cauliflower brings vitamin C, vitamin K, fiber, and sulfur-based compounds long valued for their antioxidant benefits.

Every order is packed with care by our small team in Pennsylvania and typically ships within 2–3 business days—often by the next business day. We ship throughout the United States using USPS and UPS.

Unopened items may be returned within 30 days of delivery. If an order arrives damaged, incomplete, or incorrect, please contact us so we can make it right.

View Shipping Policy

We stand behind every packet we sell. Our seeds are carefully selected, tested for germination, untreated, and guaranteed to be true to variety.

Your seeds are covered for one year from the date of purchase. If they fail to germinate under reasonable growing conditions, arrive damaged, or do not grow true to type, contact us and we’ll make it right with a replacement, store credit, or refund.

View Refund, Return & Guarantee Policy

For spring planting, start seed indoors 5-7 weeks before transplanting into the garden. Optimum soil temperature for seed germination is 50-85 degrees. Transplant to the garden 2 to 3 weeks before your average last frost date. For fall planting, start transplants 7-9 weeks before average first frost or direct sow in garden late summer. Cauliflower should be blanched when the head is about 2 to 3 inches for a white head. Pull 3 to 4 leaves over the head and rubber band. Blanching time is about 4 to 8 days.

Scientific name: brassica oleracea
Days to maturity: 65-75
Seed depth: 1/2"
Days to sprout: 4-10
Plant spacing: 9-18"
Row spacing: 2-3'
Light requirements: sunny / shade tolerant
Plant height: 24-30"
Life cycle: annual
Frost hardy: yes

Previous
Next

NON-GMO

Open-pollinated varieties for home gardens & seed saving

UNTREATED SEED

Safe seed, free from chemical treatments

HAND PACKED IN PA

Prepared with care by our family and small team

100% SATISFACTION

Third-party lab tested and backed by our guarantee

Growing Guide

Cauliflower begins as a sturdy crown of blue-green leaves, then slowly gathers its center into a pale, tightly folded head. Cultivated from ancient Mediterranean cabbages, it has become one of the garden’s most striking transformations—an unopened mass of flower tissue hidden beneath broad sheltering leaves.

Varieties may form white, purple, orange, or green heads, including pointed Romanesco types. Cauliflower is a cool-season biennial grown as an annual, and it rewards steady growth, even moisture, and mild weather more than almost any other garden vegetable.

Start seeds indoors about 4–6 weeks before transplanting. Set hardened spring plants outdoors about 2–4 weeks before the expected last frost.

Cauliflower forms its best heads in cool, settled weather. Sustained heat, severe cold, or interrupted growth can lead to small or poorly formed heads. For fall harvest, count backward from the variety’s days to maturity and allow extra time as autumn growth slows.

Sow seeds about ¼–½ inch deep in moist seed-starting mix. Provide bright light and cool, steady growing conditions after emergence.

Harden seedlings gradually before transplanting and space them about 18–24 inches apart. Use young, actively growing plants rather than seedlings that have become root-bound or stressed, since cauliflower is sensitive to setbacks early in life.

Choose a site with full sun and fertile, well-drained soil enriched with finished compost. Keep growth steady with balanced fertility, but avoid excess nitrogen that produces abundant leaves without a well-developed head.

Maintain even soil moisture throughout the season and mulch once plants are established. White-headed varieties may need their outer leaves loosely folded or tied over the developing head to protect its color, while many newer varieties naturally curl their leaves inward.

Harvest when the head is full, firm, and tightly packed, before the surface begins to loosen or separate. Mature size varies greatly by variety, so firmness and density are better guides than diameter alone.

Cut the head with several surrounding leaves attached to protect it after harvest. Cauliflower does not usually produce useful side shoots after the main head is removed.

Cauliflower provides fiber, folate, vitamin C, vitamin K, potassium, and naturally occurring glucosinolates. Purple varieties also contain anthocyanins, while orange types contain more carotenoid pigments.

Use the heads raw, roasted, steamed, grilled, pickled, or added to soups, curries, casseroles, and grain dishes. The tender leaves and peeled stems are edible as well and can be cooked much like other brassica greens.

Cabbageworms, loopers, and other caterpillars may chew leaves or hide near the developing head. Inspect plants regularly, remove eggs and caterpillars by hand, and use insect netting from transplanting onward where these pests are common.

Flea beetles, aphids, slugs, and cutworms may also damage plants. Crop rotation, good airflow, clean beds, soil-level watering, and nearby flowering plants that support beneficial insects help reduce problems. Remove plants showing severe yellowing or V-shaped leaf lesions, which may indicate black rot.

Cauliflower is an insect-pollinated biennial and crosses with other Brassica oleracea crops, including broccoli, cabbage, kale, collards, Brussels sprouts, and kohlrabi.

Save seed from several healthy, true-to-type, open-pollinated plants. Grow only one flowering B. oleracea variety nearby or provide generous isolation. Selected plants must survive winter and flower during their second season.

Allow the seedpods to turn tan and begin drying, then cut the stalks before the pods shatter. Finish drying under cover, thresh, clean, and store the fully dry seed in a cool, dark place.

  • Fall crops are often easier to mature than spring crops.
  • Keep young plants growing without interruption.
  • Protect developing white heads from strong sunlight.
  • Harvest promptly once the head begins to loosen.
  • Rotate cauliflower with crops outside the brassica family.