Broccoli Seed Pods — Eat Them or Sprout Them

broccoli seed pods

🥦 Broccoli Seed Pods — Eat Them or Sprout Them

Originally shared July 2023

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If you leave broccoli plants in the ground long enough, they eventually bolt and produce flowers — and after that, seed pods.

Most people see this as the end of the crop…

👉 but it’s actually the start of something new.


🌿 What are broccoli seed pods?

They’re the long, thin pods that form after flowering — and they’re completely edible.

The key is timing:

  • Pick them young → tender, slightly peppery
  • Leave them too long → tough and fibrous

When harvested at the right stage, they make a great addition to salads or stir-fries.


🥗 Cook it yourself

Young broccoli pods are:

  • Lightly peppery (a bit like radish)
  • Crisp and fresh
  • Excellent sprinkled into salads

You can also:

  • Toss them quickly in a pan
  • Add them to noodle dishes
  • Use them as a seasonal “bonus crop”

👉 A nice reminder that nothing on the allotment needs to go to waste.


🌱 Grow it again — by sprouting

If you let some pods mature fully, you’ll get seeds — and those seeds are perfect for sprouting.

How to sprout broccoli seeds:

  1. Soak seeds in cool water for 4–6 hours (or overnight)
  2. Make sure they’re fully submerged (not floating)
  3. Drain thoroughly
  4. Rinse and drain daily
  5. Keep in a jar or sprouter out of direct sunlight

In a few days, you’ll have fresh broccoli sprouts — packed with nutrients and flavour.


🥬 Why sprout them?

Broccoli sprouts are:

  • Highly nutritious
  • Easy to grow indoors
  • A great way to extend your harvest beyond the season

👉 Perfect for windowsill growing while the outdoor plot rests.


🌼 From the early days of the plot

This was one of those “happy accidents” — letting a crop go too far and discovering it still had plenty to give.

💬 Originally shared in the allotment Facebook group — now part of the ongoing story of the plot.