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Many flowers are beautiful—and also completely edible, adding color and flavor to salads, soups, pastas, drinks, and desserts. In fact, in ancient times, flowers were grown more for scent and flavor than looks alone. Here are 15 edible flowers that are also easy to grow.
For centuries, humans have foraged or cultivated flowers and flower buds for food, drink, and medicine. Think of squash blossoms in Italian food, chamomile or jasmine tea, and rose petals in Indian food. Some are spicy, and some herb-y, some are fragrant. All are colorful.
Flowers You Can Eat
We’re seeing a renewed interest in edible flowers. There are hundreds of common wild and cultivated plants with petals and buds which are edible. Not only are these flowers pretty in the garden, but they will add color, diversity, and new flavor to your meals.
If you’d like to grow some flowers, why not choose varieties that are also edible? Then dress up your dishes with buds and flowers. Try pansies in a salad, nasturtiums over pasta or in sandwiches! Adventurous folks might also want to explore some of the traditional medicinal uses of common flowers.
When preparing most flowers (exceptions: squash, violets, and nasturtiums) for food or beverage, use only the petals for the best flavor. Remove the sepals, as well as the pistils and stamens. In case you’ve forgotten your flower anatomy, here’s help.
15 Edible Flowers
Looking to grow your own edible flowers? While there are hundreds of choices, here are 15 of our favorites.
1. Nasturtium
Nasturtium sits at the top of my list. It’s easy to grow from seed, indoors or out, and every above-ground part is edible. They can be sown as seeds or bought as bedding plants in the spring. Some believe that they help keep the cucumber beetle away so I sow mine right in the same beds with the cukes. Tying the cucumbers up a fence, the nasturtiums can flow around their feet on the ground. See how to grow nasturtium.
Upon tasting nasturtium, you first taste a sweet essence from the nectar, followed by a bold, peppery tang. Throw them in whole or turn to pieces to a salad or other dish. Nasturtium leaves and flowers are rich in antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds, and have a long history of medicinal use in indigenous cultures for urinary tract, cardiovascular, and respiratory disorders.
Vibrant nasturtiums bring vibrant color and a punchy pepper flavor to dishes. Credit: L. Mikhailovskaya/Shutterstock
2. Violas
I have quite the love of the irrepressible wild violets (Viola sororia or Viola odorata) that pop up all over my lawns and gardens. Give it a read, and tend your lawn violets with care! Violas and Pansies are perennials that also belong to the genus Viola but are often treated as annual plants. These happy-faced flowers are among the first to get planted in the spring. See how to grow pansies. All violas and their leaves are both edible and medicinal. They can be crystallized, used in syrups, and in baking. See our recipe for violet flower infused jelly!
3. Calendula
These daisy-like annual flowers come in yellows and oranges, with tan and soft pink varieties available. See how to grow calendula. Calendula petals will add color and spice to just about any cooked or fresh dish.
They can be added to a dish whole or the petals can be carefully removed and tossed into salads, stir-fries, or your favorite rice dishes for a peppery flavor. The flowers can be used in place of saffron to impart a golden yellow hue to dishes, even bread rolls. They are also easy to dry. Pull the petals and put them on a cookie tray.
Leave this in a very dry spot; the top of a warm closet, an attic, or an oven with a pilot light. After a couple of days, they can be collected and put in a sealed jar for storage.
Calendulas are also known for their healing properties. You’ll find calendula listed as an ingredient in many high-end skincare products and healing creams. Here’s a nice recipe for homemade calendula oil or cream: Pull the petals from enough dried or fresh calendula blossoms to give you a cup. Add petals to 200 ml (about 1 cup) of olive oil in a large glass jar with a lid; seal and leave in a sunny window or outside for a week or two. After straining out the petals, you can use the oil as is, or heat it in a double boiler with ¼ cup of melted beeswax to make a spreadable cream.
4. Marigolds
Some marigolds are edible, too. There is a series called “gems” that are just delightful. ‘Lemon Gem’ is bright yellow, while ‘Tangerine Gem’ is a lovely orange. They don’t have a lot of taste, but dress up a dish with pizzaz. The plants also, when rubbed, give off a lemony scent that is a delightful aroma when wandering in the garden.
I plant my marigolds as a companion plant around broccoli, Brussels sprouts, and cabbage to help deter the cabbage moth. See how to plant marigolds.
Many small edible flowers such as violas and marigolds can be added to ice cubes for a cocktail, event, and just because! Fill the tray halfway, add flower, and add a few drops of water. Freeze overnight, and then fill ice trays completely to freeze overnight again.
5. Chives
Chives with their delicate purple flower can also be added to the list. These are very spicy and might be best utilized pulled apart and used judiciously like a spice. They can also be made into chive vinegar. Put the flowers into a clear jar with organic vinegar and leave in the Sun for a couple of weeks. Strain out the buds and keep them in a sealed jar in the pantry. See how to grow chives.
6. Roses
All roses are edible. The more aromatic the rose, the more flavor it will have. Rosa rugosa is probably the most common edible rose. Harvest roses early in the day. To encourage more blooms, cut flowers at a 45-degree angle down to the lowest, outward-facing blossoms. To use roses, gently pull the petals off the flower and cut off the whitish base. See how to grow roses.
Strew rose petals across a fresh salad, brew them into tea, or use the entire blossoms to decorate a cake. The petals can also be made into jam. In autumn, you can make rose hip syrup.
7. Sunflowers
Carefully separate the petals and sprinkle them into salads. For a real treat, harvest the unopened buds, remove the sepals, and steam the buds until tender. Meaty and filling, they taste like artichokes. Mmmm! See how to grow sunflowers.
8. Chamomile
Dating back at least 2000 years to the ancient Egyptians, people have used dried chamomile flowers for medicine, cosmetics, and perfumes.
Dried or fresh, chamomile tea is renowned as a safe and gentle calming and sleep-promoting agent. It’s readily available in stores (buy flowers in bulk) and easy to grow in the home garden. Read more about chamomile tea and healing.
9. Hibiscus
Try making your own hibiscus syrup for cocktails! The flowers are proven to lower blood pressure if used in tea. The calyx of the Roselle variety makes an especially wonderful tea (or jelly due to the high pectin content of the flowers). The flavor is tart and zingy, and the color is a vibrant cranberry. See how to grow hibiscus flowers.
10. Scented Geraniums
Both the flowers and the leaves of scented geraniums are completely edible. Not only are they pretty but they add a fine aroma to salads, meat dishes, and desserts. the aroma depends on the scent! For example, lemon-scented geraniums add a lemony zest to salads and sorbet. See how to grow scented geraniums.
11. Fennel
All parts of the fennel plant are edible. It’s a very tall plant in the carrot family with an umbel-type flower similar to dill, coriander, and caraway.
Fennel’s flower heads contribute a delicious licorice flavor to any dish. Sprinkle over potato salad. Even a small bit of fennel flower adds an anise flavor to stews, sauces, soups, and meat rubs. Of course, the bulbs can be eaten raw, broiled, or pickled. The seeds are commonly used as an after-dinner digestive aid in some countries.
12. Daylily
Daylilies are a popular staple in Asian cuisine. Every part of the daylily plant is edible: you can pluck the young shoots, boil the tubers like potatoes, or spruce up your salads with its bright orange petals. See how to grow daylilies.
Harvested fresh, I like to sauté the plump buds and meaty flowers in a little oil or butter, then season with salt and pepper. Some people stuff the just-opened blossom with a favorite stuffing mix, then saute the stuffed flowers in a little oil or poach them in broth. Use only freshly harvested buds/flowers. The flowers are wonderful in stir-fries! (Note: The day “lily” is not related to other types of lilies. Most other lilies are, in fact, NOT edible.)
13. Dandelions
Let’s not forget about dandelions! In early spring, young dandelion leaves are particularly delicious when they are underground and just about to emerge. These can be washed carefully and steamed for a few minutes. Serve with salt and butter. See dandelion recipes for cooking dandelion greens, making dandelion wine, canning dandelion jelly, and even frying the dandelion blossoms.
14. Borage
Borage is one of our favorite herbs to grow. Both the blue flowers and the young leaves (the older ones get too hairy) are edible, lending a cucumber-like flavor to salads and soups. The flowers are also wonderful in a summer drink.
Also, borage is an excellent companion in the vegetable garden bed as it deters pests and attracts beneficials to pollinate your veggies!
15. Squash Blossoms
Squash blossoms are edible, especially right as they drop. Just Google “squash blossoms,” and you’ll see all the recipes! They’re most commonly dipped in light batters and fried or stuffed with cheesy fillings, dusted with flour, and fried or used as a garnish.
Squash blossoms aren’t the only vegetable flower that’s edible. For example, all brassica flowers are edible (cauliflower, cabbage, brussels sprouts, broccoli, radish, arugula). However, the flowers of the Nightshade family are NOT edible, including flowers of tomato, potato, eggplant, and pepper (capsicum). Asparagus flowers (and berries) are also toxic.
Edible Herbs
Keep in mind that the blossoms of many herbs are edible, and usually taste like a milder version of the leaf. Add rosemary flowers to butter! Sprinkle chive flowers on potato salad. Add lemon verbena to lemonade or sparkling water. Below are 10 herbs to try and here’s how to grow herbs.
Oregano/Marjoram
Mint
Chive
Cilantro
Lemon verbena
Thyme
Rosemary
Basil
Sage
Wild garlic flowers
Invasive/Non-Native Edible Flowers
Keep in mind that many of the invasive plants in your yard are edible, too! Feed two birds with one stone by removing these plants and eating them, too.
White clover (Trifolium repens) is especially enjoyable and tastes a little bit like green beans! Here are 10 invasives/non-natives that you may find in your yard or nearby woodlands.
White Clover
Red Deadnettle
Dandelion*
Garlic Mustard
Forsythia
Creeping Charlie
Chickweed
Winter Bittercress
Little Bur Clover
Henbit
*Yes, the common dandelion is a non-native and often invasive. If you’re concerned about foraging for dandelion blossoms because it’s bee food, this is not as big an issue as it’s been made out to be. Dandelions are actually not the best food for our native bees. See best flowers to plant for bees.
Before You Go Picking …
The right flower can be a lovely addition to a dish, but before you go picking, be aware of the following:
Don’t eat commercially grown flowers or flowers that came from a florist; they could have been sprayed.
Don’t forage wildflowers on treated lawns or along roads or in any place that has been sprayed with pesticides or herbicides.
Never eat a flower you can’t identify with absolute certainty and know to be safe. Many flowers are not edible including sweet peas, hydrangeas, foxglove, columbines, oleander, rhododendrons, and delphiniums. See this Edible Flowers Chart to learn what’s safe.
There’s a great app called “Seek” by iNaturlist to help with identification but always do more research to be 100% positive about what parts are edible, whether you can eat it raw, different ways it may look, and poisonous lookalikes. Maybe start with dandelions and things you know and can’t mess up and go from there. Good luck!
Introduce a new edible flower or floral tea slowly and gradually, especially if you have a serious ragweed or other pollen allergy. On your first try, take a few deep sniffs, then only a bite or two.
Because flowers may contain powerful phytocompounds (which confer their healing virtues, as well as their flavors and colors), check with your healthcare professional before eating edible flowers if you’re pregnant or taking prescription drugs.
Now, check out our beautiful video to see edible flowers and learn how to use them.
Margaret Boyles is a longtime contributor to The Old Farmer’s Almanac. She wrote for UNH Cooperative Extension, managed NH Outside, and contributes to various media covering environmental and human health issues. Read More from Margaret Boyles
It would be so helpful in your articles if you would note plants/flowers that are toxic to pets. Borage, for instance, is extremely toxic to cats, and also toxic to dogs. Same for tansy.
Dandelion heads can make a wine if you're into home brewing. Dandelion roots are probably best avoided as they are a diuretic so we'll know where to find you! Also, probably where the saying "if you pick dandelions you'll wet the bed" comes from. Other parts of the dandelion are diuretic but not so bad (eat them earlier in the day).
One of my favorite soups is 'Hot and Sour Soup'. It's on the menu in most, if not all, Chinese restaurants; even corner 'take out' joints. One of the ingredients is spent (wilted) day lily flowers. Some places don't include them but if you eat at a good quality restaurant they do. I have two excellent Chinese cook books (I'd say Asian, but they only include recipes from China) that include the flowers as traditional ingredients in this soup. I have a couple of stands of day lilies in my yard and have always collected the flowers after the bloom, dry them and save them for soups year round. They're great in good old chicken soup.
I am so fascinated and intrigued by the possibility of eating flowers and I sure hope that I can get the go-ahead from my physician! There is so much good information in this article. My husband and I are growing a different variety of zucchini this year and in all the information I have read about it, they encourage eating the blossoms. We have an abundance of roses, violets, and other wonderful flowers and vegetables as well. The list in the article was great, but I wanted more information so I followed the link for the longer list and was disappointed to find that it did not exist on that website. :( I'm curious if there was supposed to be more to the article also. The way it starts hints that there was more to it. I don't want to miss any information the OFA may have on this subject.