Vegetable categories
10 culinary categories spanning roots, alliums, brassicas, nightshades, squashes, mushrooms, leafy greens, stalks, and the boundary cases. Each category unifies multiple varieties by shared culinary role, technique, and seasonal pattern. Botanical taxonomy and culinary identity often diverge in the vegetable world — these categories follow the kitchen, not the lab.
Root vegetables
Underground storage organs
Vegetables defined by their below-ground harvest and their role as starchy or storage-dense culinary anchors.
Alliums
Onions, garlic, leeks, shallots, and their relatives
The aromatic vegetable base of nearly every cuisine on Earth.
Brassicas
The cabbage family
Vegetables defined by their sulfur-containing glucosinolate chemistry and their amenability to both raw and cooked preparations.
Nightshade vegetables
Tomatoes, peppers, and eggplants
Botanical fruits used as savory vegetables.
Squashes
Cucurbits eaten as vegetables
Two distinct culinary subcategories united by botanical family.
Mushrooms
Fungi treated culinarily as vegetables
The vegetable category that isn't actually a vegetable.
Cooking greens
Sturdy greens for sautés, braises, and stocks
Greens whose flavor and texture improve with cooking.
Salad greens
Tender greens eaten raw
Greens whose flavor and texture are best presented raw.
Fresh pods & legumes
Pods and seeds eaten fresh
The boundary-case category for vegetables that are botanically grains, dried legumes, or fruits but consumed fresh in immature stages and culinarily treated as vegetables.
Stalks & stems
Vegetables eaten for their stems
A heterogeneous category of vegetables whose edible portion is the stalk, stem, or leaf base rather than the leaf, root, fruit, or flower.