06/02/2026
A few thoughts on harvesting cabbage, broccoli, and cauliflower from the garden.
The main rule is pretty simple: harvest it when it looks good and you’re ready to use it — but don’t wait so long that nobody gets to eat it.
We sometimes get the idea that everything from the garden has to look exactly like it came from the grocery store, but that’s not really how gardens work. Cabbage can be harvested small, medium, or large. If the head feels firm and you’re ready to use it, cut it. And remember, the loose outer leaves are still cabbage too. They may not be packed into a tight little ball, but they are perfectly good for soups, stir-fries, cooked greens, slaw, or anything else where cabbage makes sense.
The same general idea applies to broccoli and cauliflower. If your cauliflower is starting to turn a little brown around the florets, that does not automatically mean something is wrong. A little discoloration is usually just oxidation or exposure to sun and air. Trim it if you want to, but it is often perfectly fine to eat.
Broccoli is the same way. If it starts to open up a little, dry out a bit, or even go toward seed, that does not mean it has to go in the compost pile. We eat seeds every day, and there is good nutrition there too. The texture may be a little different, but it can still be great cooked, chopped into soup, tossed into a stir-fry, or used however you would normally use broccoli.
What you do want to watch for are areas that have actually started to decay. If part of the broccoli is mushy, slimy, or smells bad, cut that part out. Your nose is usually a pretty good guide. A stinky, mushy spot may need to go, but that does not mean the whole plant is ruined.
And if you have a bumper crop, don’t let it sit out there going downhill just because you’re not ready to eat all of it today. Sometimes it’s better to pick a little earlier than you planned, freeze some, cook some, or give some away. Picking it a little early is usually not a problem. Picking it too late can mean the bugs, heat, or decay get more of it than you do.
I overpicked today myself and put a big chunk of it in the freezer. That’s still a win. Garden food in the freezer, in the kitchen, or in a neighbor’s hands is a whole lot better than perfect-looking food that stayed in the garden one week too long.
That’s one of the joys of growing food. It teaches us not to be so wasteful and not to expect every vegetable to look like it was designed for a magazine cover. A garden vegetable may be a little crooked, bug-nibbled, sun-kissed, overgrown, or imperfect — and still be delicious.
So don’t wait forever trying to grow the “perfect” cabbage, broccoli, or cauliflower. Harvest it when it looks useful, when you can preserve it or share it, and before the garden decides somebody else gets to eat it first.