Alaska Pea
🌿 Alaska Pea Seeds — The OG Spring Sweetheart 30+ Peas/Packet · Pisum sativum ‘Alaska’ · The classic early pea your great-grandparents bragged about before Instagram existed — and for good reason. Alaska Pea is the spring garden’s fir...
🌿 Alaska Pea Seeds — The OG Spring Sweetheart
30+ Peas/Packet
Pisum sativum ‘Alaska’
The classic early pea your great-grandparents bragged about before Instagram existed — and for good reason. Alaska Pea is the spring garden’s first applause line 👏🌱: compact vines, dependable germination, and sweet green pearls that taste like cold mornings, fresh mint, and optimism.
Ultra-early to mature (50–55 days) 🌱⏱️, cold-tolerant ❄️, and famously reliable, this heirloom fills hands and hearts fast. Eat straight from the vine 🍃👅, stir into lemon-mint butter pasta 🍋🧈, or blitz into a silky pea purée that whispers, “yeah, I cook.”
A staple for chefs chasing clean spring sweetness + crisp snap. Also killer for pea shoots 🌿👨🍳 — tender, sweet, and drenched in spring energy.
👅 Flavor Profile:
Sweet 🌱, green-fresh 🌿, lightly grassy 🍃, crisp + juicy 💧.
Think: first day of spring… but edible.
🍴 Culinary Uses:
🥗 Toss fresh with lemon zest, mint & flaky salt
🍝 Fold into spring pastas with ricotta + chives
🥄 Purée with cultured butter for silky green heaven
🍣 Use raw peas + pea tendrils as sushi garnish
🍞 Smash warm peas on toast with olive oil + pecorino
🥂 Pair with champagne — because you can
👨🍳 Chef’s Pitch:
Alaska is spring in a pod — crisp, sweet, and fragrant.
Use young peas raw for snap + aroma, or blanch 30 seconds for sweet, tender jewels. Plate with pea shoots for layered green-on-green bragging rights.
Minimal prep, maximum “yes chef.”
🌱 Growing Notes:
🪴 Compact vines 24–36” — small garden hero
🥶 Cool-season champion, great for early sowing
⏱️ 50–55 days to maturity
👩🌾 Direct-sow as soon as soil can be worked
🤝 Benefits from a light trellis/net
🌞 Full sun | 🪴 Great in raised beds
✂️ Regular picking boosts production big-time
Start indoors 8–10 weeks before last frost. Germinate at 26–30 °C on a heat mat; peppers stall below 22 °C. Pot up to 10–15 cm before hardening off outside after nights stay above 12 °C.
Feed balanced through bloom, then bump potassium for fruiting. Stake taller varieties. More detail in our full Canadian growing guide.
Match the pepper to the technique: thin-walled varieties blister fast in a hot pan; thick-walled ones roast or stuff beautifully; fruit-forward ones make balanced sauces and pickles. The variety's flavour profile is your shortcut — see Choosing the right pepper for a use-case guide.
























