Vegetable Seeds Heritage Open-pollinated

Rocket Wild

True perennial wild rocket - deeply peppery Italian-tradition salad green

£1.70approx. 1000 seeds

The proper wild Mediterranean rocket - smaller leaves, fuller bite, perennial habit that returns year after year, the assertive Italian salad green that ordinary rocket only hints at.

Sowing months
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Harvest months
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
Height
20-30cm
Spread
15-20cm
Spacing
15cm
Position
Full sun. Drought-tolerant once established.
Soil
Tolerates most soils including poor and gravelly.
Grow guide
How to grow Rocket Wild
Read the full guide →
About this variety

Diplotaxis tenuifolia Wild rocket (perennial), peppery deeply-cut leaves

The proper wild Mediterranean rocket — not the milder salad rocket of supermarket bags, but the smaller-leaved, deeply-cut, intensely peppery wild type that gives Italian salads their characteristic bite. Wild Rocket (Diplotaxis tenuifolia) is a different species to common cultivated rocket (Eruca sativa), and the distinction matters: the leaves are narrower and more finely divided, the flavour is significantly more pungent and complex, and the plants are perennial — they survive winter, regrow from the same crown the following spring, and continue producing for several years from a single sowing.

The flavour is the entire point. Wild rocket leaves have a serious peppery kick that builds slowly on the tongue, with mustard-like complexity and a slight bitter finish that pairs beautifully with rich foods, sharp cheeses, and acid dressings. This is rocket for cooks who want rocket to taste of something definite — the assertive flavour that defines genuine Italian salads, transforms a sliced tomato into something interesting, and stands up to roast beef and parmesan without disappearing.

The perennial habit makes Wild Rocket more useful than annual rocket varieties. A spring sowing produces useful leaves within 6–8 weeks, continues cropping through summer (with regular picking), survives autumn frosts (the leaves get slightly more pungent and slightly tougher in cold weather but remain useful), and re-emerges in early spring as one of the earliest fresh salads of the year. A single sowing well sited can provide useful pickings for two or three years before the plants need replacing.

Wild Rocket is a true wild species rather than a cultivated variety, so all plants from seed grow with the natural variability of a wild population. Plants are self-seeding in mild conditions, naturalising into gravel paths, rough corners, and gaps in paving where they look entirely at home — a deliberate feature in some Italian-influenced kitchen gardens.

A note on growing

Direct sow outdoors from April to September. Sow seed thinly at 0.5cm depth, very thinly — rocket seed is tiny and easily oversown. Germination takes 7–14 days. Thin to 15cm apart between final plants — closer planting forces faster bolting and reduces overall yield. Plants can also be sown in containers or pots, which suits balconies and patio kitchen gardens.

Water consistently — drought-stressed rocket bolts to flower and becomes excessively hot. Mulch around plants to retain moisture. Once established, Wild Rocket is remarkably drought-tolerant for a salad green — the deep taproot reaches moisture that shallower-rooted vegetables cannot access.

For continuous summer harvest, pick the outer leaves regularly — the more you pick, the more the plant produces. The plant naturally bolts to yellow flowers in midsummer; if you don't mind losing leaf production, the flowers are edible and attractive, with a mild peppery flavour, and excellent in summer salads. If you want continuous leaf production, cut off the flower stems as they appear.

In autumn, the plants slow their growth but continue producing useful leaves. In winter, growth pauses but plants remain alive. Spring sees vigorous regrowth from the established crown.

Harvest from June onwards by picking outer leaves individually. Young leaves are milder; older leaves are spicier. Pick at the size you prefer for your kitchen use.

Where it shines

In the kitchen, Wild Rocket is the assertive Italian salad green. Pile generously alongside grilled meats and grilled vegetables. Use as a substantial base for warm chicken salads. Add to pasta with olive oil and parmesan. Layer onto pizzas after baking (the heat softens the leaves without destroying the colour). Use as a peppery alternative to basil in pesto, particularly walnut-and-rocket pesto. Add to summer sandwiches where you want a flavour with backbone. Top steaks with a handful of dressed rocket and shaved parmesan for the classic Italian preparation. The yellow flowers (when they appear) make beautiful garnishes for soup and salad.

In the garden, plant Wild Rocket in a permanent corner where you don't mind it self-seeding — a gravel path edge, a herb bed, an unused corner. The perennial habit and self-seeding nature make it more like a herb than an annual vegetable, and many cooks treat it as exactly that.

Plant alongside

Rocket is a useful companion for many vegetables. Plant alongside lettuce (which softens the rocket's intensity in mixed salads), tomatoes (the strong scent of rocket can deter some tomato pests), and brassicas. Calendula 'Neon' attracts beneficial predators. Naturalise alongside herbs and Mediterranean plants like rosemary, thyme, and oregano where it will look completely at home.

Plant alongside

Rocket Wild pairs beautifully with these kitchen garden companions