The first vegetable NASA astronauts ever grew and ate aboard the International Space Station wasn’t a potato or a tomato — it was lettuce, a red romaine called ‘Outredgeous.’
There’s a reason it beat everything else to the table: lettuce is fast, compact, and almost absurdly easy to please.
Yet most of us only ever meet the handful of kinds sold at the grocery store, while seed catalogs list hundreds in colors and flavors that never survive shipping.
This guide walks you through the 5 main lettuce families, the standout varieties in each, and how to match them to your climate and season — so you spend your time picking salads, not pulling bitter, bolted plants.
By the end, you’ll know exactly which packets belong in your cart.
Lettuce at a glance
- Cool-season annual that grows best between about 60°F and 70°F
- 5 main families: looseleaf, butterhead, romaine, summer crisp, and crisphead
- Fastest harvest: baby looseleaf in about 30 days; slowest: iceberg at 70–85 days
- Sow a pinch of seed every 2–3 weeks for a steady, non-stop supply
- Heat triggers bolting and bitterness — variety choice and afternoon shade are your best defenses
The 5 Main Types of Lettuce
Every lettuce in every catalog belongs to a single species, Lactuca sativa, and people have grown it for a very long time — it appears in Egyptian tomb art more than 4,000 years old, and the Roman emperor Augustus supposedly raised a statue to a lettuce he credited with curing an illness.
Over the centuries, breeders have sorted all that diversity into a few families. Learn them, and every seed catalog instantly makes sense.
| Type | Texture and flavor | Days to harvest | Best for |
| Looseleaf | Soft, ruffled, mild | 30–40 baby; 45–60 full | Beginners, containers, repeat harvests |
| Butterhead | Tender, sweet, “buttery” | 50–70 | Wraps, sandwiches, small spaces |
| Romaine (cos) | Crisp, juicy, mildly sweet | 55–75 | Caesar salads, grilling, warm spells |
| Summer crisp | Crunchy, sweet, sturdy | 50–60 | Summer growing, all-around use |
| Crisphead (iceberg) | Very crunchy, mild, watery | 70–85 | Wedge salads, patient gardeners |
Looseleaf Lettuce: The Easiest Place to Start
Looseleaf varieties skip head-forming entirely and grow as open rosettes of ruffled leaves.
That’s great news for impatient gardeners: you can start picking outer leaves about a month after sowing, and the plant keeps making more.
Looseleaf types also take the least space, tolerate the widest range of conditions, and forgive nearly every beginner mistake. If you grow only one lettuce, make it this one.
Varieties worth trying:
- Black Seeded Simpson: a 19th-century heirloom that’s still the benchmark for speed and reliability
- frilly Grand Rapids
- Red Sails: one of the slowest-bolting red lettuces around
- Tango: whose deeply crinkled leaves add instant texture to a salad
- Bronze-tipped Prizehead
- and Amish Deer Tongue: an old variety with flat: arrowhead-shaped leaves you’ll never find in a store.
Butterhead Lettuce: Tender, Sweet, and Wrap-Ready
Butterheads — often sold as Boston or Bibb lettuce — form loose, rose-shaped heads of soft, cupped leaves with a gentle sweetness.
The leaves hold less water than other types, so they won’t sog out a sandwich, and their natural cup shape makes them the single best lettuce for wraps.
Despite the delicate look, butterheads mature faster than romaine or iceberg and handle temperature swings surprisingly well.
I ignored butterheads for years because they looked too fragile to be worth the bed space.
Then a neighbor passed a head of Buttercrunch over the fence, roots still attached, and that night’s salad quietly ended my loyalty to romaine.
The leaves really are as soft as the name promises, sweet without a trace of bitterness, and shaped like little cups begging to be filled. I’ve sown a row every spring since.
Varieties worth trying:
- Buttercrunch: an award winner from the 1960s that tolerates both heat and cold
- Tom Thumb: which makes charming single-serving heads
- The French heirloom Marvel of Four Seasons
- Nancy: a crisp Boston type that stays sound through rainy spells
- Skyphos: a red butterhead that seems to thrive almost anywhere
- Drunken Woman Frizzy Headed: a ruffled heirloom worth growing for the name alone.
Romaine (Cos) Lettuce: Crunch That Can Take Some Heat
Romaine grows tall and upright — anywhere from 6 inches to 2 feet — with thick, juicy midribs and a mild, faintly sweet flavor.
It’s the backbone of Caesar salad and the best lettuce for grilling, since the sturdy leaves char nicely before they collapse.
As a group, romaine handles warmth better than iceberg, and a few varieties genuinely shine in it.

Varieties worth trying:
- Parris Island Cos: the dependable classic
- Jericho: bred in desert heat and famously slow to turn bitter
- Monte Carlo: a compact head sized perfectly for sandwiches
- Winter Density for cold-season sowings
- Speckled heirlooms like Freckles (also sold as Trout Back) that look hand-painted
- Outredgeous — yes: the space lettuce from the introduction grows just as happily in a backyard.
Summer Crisp (Batavia): The Best Lettuce Most Gardeners Skip
Summer crisp — also called Batavia or French crisp — sits between looseleaf and iceberg, and it may be the most useful family of all.
Plants start out loose and leafy, so you can pick early the way you would a looseleaf, then let them close into a crunchy, juicy head if you can wait.
Best of all, this group resists heat and bolting better than almost anything else, which makes it the go-to choice for summer sowings.
Varieties worth trying:
- Muir and Nevada: both standouts for heat tolerance in variety trials
- Sierra: green with red blushes
- Cherokee: a dark red that stays sweet in peak summer
- Magenta: with gently wavy bronze-red leaves
- Ice Queen (Reine des Glaces): a French heirloom whose lacy leaves handle chill and heat alike.
Crisphead (Iceberg): The Expert-Level Challenge
Homegrown iceberg is a different vegetable from the pale globes at the store — crisper, sweeter, and genuinely flavorful.
It’s also the fussiest lettuce to grow. Crisphead needs 70–85 days of steadily cool weather to wrap a tight head, and a heat wave in the middle of that window usually means bolting instead of harvest.
Grow it as a fall crop or set out transplants in early spring, and treat success as a badge of honor.
Varieties worth trying:
- Crispino: widely considered the most forgiving garden iceberg
- Great Lakes and Ithaca: two old standbys
- Anuenue: bred in Hawaii for warm climates
- Red Iceberg: a chocolate-red conversation piece.

One note on color while you’re choosing: red lettuces get their pigment from anthocyanins, the same antioxidants that color berries.
They’re gorgeous in the bed and on the plate, though many gardeners find certain reds turn bitter a little faster in heat.
If that’s been your experience, don’t give up on red — just lean on proven performers like New Red Fire or Cherokee.
Specialty Lettuces and Lookalike Greens
Once you know the 5 families, a few specialty types deserve a corner of the bed:
- Oakleaf

Deeply lobed leaves shaped like their namesake — tender, quick, and technically looseleaf, though catalogs often list them separately. Try Panisse or the classic Salad Bowl pair.
- Lollo

Intensely frilled Italian types (Lollo Rossa in red, Lollo Biondo in green) that add loft to salads and look stunning edging a raised bed or pot.
- Little Gem and the minis

Little Gem is a mini romaine with sweet, crunchy, hand-sized heads; each one is just right for a single generous salad, and plants need only 6 inches of spacing.
Breen and Pomegranate Crunch are red minis in the same spirit.
- One-cut lettuce

A modern group, best known under the brand name Salanova, bred so one cut at the base drops the whole head into uniform, ready-made baby leaves.
The seed costs more, but plants regrow quickly and the leaves keep up to 2 weeks in the fridge.
- All-lettuce cutting mixes

A single packet blends several looseleaf, oakleaf, and romaine varieties chosen to mature together, so every cutting fills the bowl with mixed colors and textures.
Sow thickly, harvest as cut-and-come-again — ideal for planter boxes. (Blends labeled mesclun or spring mix fold in non-lettuce greens too.)
- Celtuce

A lettuce grown for its thick, crunchy stem rather than its leaves — long popular in Chinese cooking and a fun oddball for adventurous growers.
You’ll also meet “lettuces” that aren’t lettuce at all:
- Arugula brings a peppery bite
- MΓ’che (corn salad) laughs at real cold
- Mizuna adds a mustardy kick,
- The chicory clan — radicchio, endive, escarole — offers pleasant bitterness and excellent cold tolerance.
They all grow much like lettuce and mix beautifully in the same salad bowl, so don’t let botany stop you.
Why Lettuce Bolts (and How to Outsmart It)
Here’s the most important thing to understand about lettuce: it’s a cool-season crop, happiest when daytime temperatures sit between about 60°F and 70°F.
Sustained heat, lengthening days, and stress — especially dry soil — push the plant to bolt: it stretches skyward, flowers, and sets seed.
When that switch flips, bitter compounds in the plant’s milky sap concentrate quickly. (The genus name Lactuca comes from the Latin word for milk.)
That’s why a bed of sweet lettuce can turn sharp seemingly overnight in July.
Two things follow from this.
1. First, bolting is irreversible — cutting a bolting plant back won’t reset it, so harvest the whole thing the moment the center starts to stretch and new leaves turn narrow and pointed.
2. Second, heat blocks germination too: lettuce seed goes dormant in soil above roughly 80°F, which is why midsummer sowings often fail before they start.
Beat it by chilling seed in the fridge for a few days before sowing, starting seeds indoors where it’s cooler, or sowing in the evening into moist, shaded soil.
If Your Summers Run Hot
Choose the right genetics first: any summer crisp variety, plus proven heat-handlers like Jericho, Coastal Star, Buttercrunch, Salad Bowl, New Red Fire, and Anuenue, will shrug off heat that sends other lettuces to seed.
Then stack the deck. Plant where lettuce gets morning sun and afternoon shade — the east side of tomatoes, corn, or a bean trellis is perfect.
Mulch about 2 inches deep to keep the roots cool, never let the soil dry out, and drape 30–50% shade cloth over hoops during heat waves. Shade alone can delay bolting by weeks.
If You Want Lettuce in the Cold Months
Cold is far easier to outsmart than heat.
Hardy varieties like Winter Density, Arctic King, Rouge d’Hiver, North Pole, and Marvel of Four Seasons keep producing through frost, especially under a row cover, cloche, cold frame, or unheated tunnel.
Sow them in late summer or early autumn and pick outer leaves through the cold months instead of waiting for full heads.
Many gardeners find autumn-sown lettuce tastes best of all — slow, cool growth keeps the leaves sweet.
One practical tip: after a freezing night, let the frost melt off the leaves before you harvest, and they’ll perk right up.
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How to Grow Lettuce, Step by Step
Whatever type you’ve chosen, the path from packet to salad looks the same.
Step 1: Give it good soil and the right light
Lettuce wants loose, well-drained soil with plenty of compost worked in and a pH between 6.0 and 6.8 — and that’s most of the feeding done, since lettuce is a light feeder.
Full sun is ideal in spring and fall; in summer, partial shade is a feature, not a compromise.
No garden bed? Containers 6–8 inches deep suit looseleaf and baby greens; go 8–10 inches for heading types.
Step 2: Sow early and shallow
Direct-sow as soon as the soil is workable in early spring — a few weeks before your last frost — or start seeds indoors about 4 weeks ahead if you want transplants.
Lettuce seed needs light to germinate, so plant it no deeper than ¼ inch — pressed into moist soil and barely dusted over is perfect.
Space rows 12–18 inches apart and aim for a seed about every inch; you’ll thin later.
In spring soil, sprouts appear in 5–10 days. You’re on track if a green haze lines the row within 2 weeks.
Step 3: Thin without guilt
Crowded lettuce stays puny and invites rot.
Thin looseleaf to 4–6 inches between plants, butterhead and romaine to 8–10 inches, and iceberg to a full 12 inches. Every thinning is a baby salad, so nothing goes to waste.
Step 4: Keep the water boringly consistent
Lettuce roots live in the top few inches of soil, so the bed needs about 1 inch of water a week — more in heat — delivered in steady doses, ideally in the morning.
The most common pitfall is letting the bed dry out “just once”: even a brief drought reads as an emergency to the plant, and bitterness or bolting follows.
A 2-inch mulch of straw evens out both moisture and temperature.
Step 5: Sow little and often
Gardening advice on succession planting ranges from weekly to monthly, so here’s a practical rule: sow a short row every 2–3 weeks, and tighten up to weekly only for baby-leaf mixes or a truly salad-hungry household.
Each sowing overlaps the last, so something is always at its peak.
My first season, I emptied an entire packet in one triumphant weekend of sowing. The whole bed matured at once about 6 weeks later, and I was leaving bags of lettuce on neighbors’ porches like a zucchini grower in August.
By midsummer I had nothing left but bolted stumps. Now I sow a short row every other weekend, and I haven’t faced feast-or-famine since.
Step 6: Patrol for the usual suspects
Slugs and snails do more damage to lettuce than everything else combined; control them with traps, copper barriers, or an iron-phosphate bait, and pull mulch back during long wet spells so they have fewer hiding places.

Knock aphids off with a hard spray of water or let ladybugs handle them, and give heading types a firm shake at harvest — earwigs love to tuck in between the leaves. A floating row cover stops most trouble before it starts.
Step 7: Harvest early, often, and in the morning
Morning-picked lettuce is at its crispest and sweetest.
For a months-long supply from the same plants, pick outer leaves once they reach 3–4 inches, or cut whole looseleaf plants 1–2 inches above the crown; leave that growing point intact and the plant regrows for another 2–4 cuttings. (Cut into the crown and it’s done.)
Harvest heading types whole at the base once the heads feel firm, and expect cut-and-come-again plants to show fresh regrowth within about a week.
Stored dry in an airtight container with a paper towel, garden lettuce keeps 2 weeks or more — noticeably longer than store-bought.
Whether you wash before storing or before eating matters less than the one non-negotiable: never put it away wet.
FAQ: Growing Different Types of Lettuce
- Why is my homegrown lettuce bitter?
Almost always heat, drought stress, or over-maturity — all three concentrate the bitter compounds in lettuce sap. Keep water consistent, add afternoon shade, and pick younger leaves in the morning.
Mildly bitter leaves often mellow after a soak in ice water or a night in the fridge; once a plant has truly bolted, though, compost it and resow.
- Can I grow lettuce indoors?
Yes — lettuce is one of the easiest crops for a bright south-facing window or an inexpensive LED grow light run 12–14 hours a day.
Stick to looseleaf mixes, baby greens, or compact butterheads in a container at least 6 inches deep with drainage holes. Expect slightly smaller, softer leaves than you’d get outdoors.
- Does lettuce grow back every year?
No — lettuce is an annual that sprouts, seeds, and dies within a single season. Cut-and-come-again harvesting regrows leaves for a few weeks, not forever.
Lettuce does self-sow readily, though: let your best plant set seed (choose the last one to bolt, not the first) and you’ll get free, locally adapted seedlings — and the seed comes true, because lettuce almost always self-pollinates.
- How much lettuce should I plant for a family?
As a starting point, sow 2–3 feet of row — roughly 4–6 plants — per salad eater every 2–3 weeks. A salad-every-day household will want about double that. Your first succession round will tell you exactly how to adjust.
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- How long do lettuce seeds last?
About 3 years if stored cool and dry. Test older seed by sprouting 10 on a damp paper towel: if 7 or more germinate within a week, sow as usual; if fewer, just sow more thickly.
Pelleted (coated) seed is the exception — plan to use it within a year.
- Is iceberg lettuce really less healthy than other types?
That myth deserves retirement — iceberg trails darker greens but still delivers vitamins A and K, folate, and plenty of hydration.
If nutrition drives your choice, romaine and red-leaf types pack the most per bite. Otherwise, grow what you’ll actually eat: a salad you enjoy beats a superfood you skip.
Start With One Short Row
Growing great lettuce really comes down to a few moves:
- Pick the right family: looseleaf for ease, butterhead for tenderness, romaine and summer crisp for crunch and warm weather, iceberg for a worthy challenge.
- Match varieties to your season instead of fighting your climate.
- Sow small amounts every 2–3 weeks and keep the water steady.
- Harvest young, often, and in the morning.
Beyond that, lettuce rewards experimenting more than almost any crop. It’s fast, cheap, and forgiving — a variety that flops costs you a month, not a season, and the one that thrives becomes your signature salad.
So this week, grab a packet of looseleaf and a packet of butterhead, sow a short row of each, and set a reminder to sow again in 2 weeks.
Save this guide for seed-catalog season; by this time next month, you’ll be eating salads no grocery store can sell you.
source https://harvestsavvy.com/types-of-lettuce/






























