Leafy greens (cooking)·Foundational·Year-round

Collard greens

Brassica oleracea var. viridis

Earthy, slightly bitter, mineral; long simmering develops deep umami flavor.

Category
Leafy greens (cooking)
Peak form
Long-simmered with smoked pork in pot likker (the rich broth
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
9

About Collard

Collard greens are the defining cooking green of American Southern cuisine — large, flat, blue-green leaves with thick central stems that require extended simmering to tenderize. The Southern tradition of collards-with-pork (ham hocks, smoked turkey, bacon) is one of American cuisine's most distinctive vegetable preparations, with West African culinary roots traveling through the African diaspora into the American South. Collards are nutritionally exceptional (extremely high in vitamin K, fiber, calcium). Beyond the Southern tradition, Brazilian couve, Ethiopian gomen, and Portuguese caldo verde all use collard-relative greens, suggesting deep cross-cultural recognition of the green's culinary versatility.

Variety profile

Botanical
Brassica oleracea var. viridis
Flavor
Earthy, slightly bitter, mineral; long simmering develops deep umami flavor.
Texture
Tough leaves require 30-60 minutes simmering to tenderize; central stem usually removed.
Peak form
Long-simmered with smoked pork in pot likker (the rich broth); Brazilian-style quick-sautéed strips.
Season window
Fall through spring; frost improves flavor; year-round supply from California + Southeast US.

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

The cooking liquid (pot likker) is traditionally consumed with cornbread — it's the highest-vitamin-density component of the dish. Discarding it loses the meal's nutritional value.

Cross-references

Related categories

Related seasonality