I was rummaging through my pantry—technically for pasta, realistically to dodge real work—when I uncovered a forgotten bag of potatoes. They weren’t just sprouting; they looked like they were trying to escape the bag. My immediate reaction was a full-body “ugh,” followed by a much more practical question: am I about to poison myself if I eat these?
Turns out, sprouted potatoes are sneakier than they look. I’d always assumed sprouts were just a cosmetic issue, like bad hair on a vegetable. Weird, sure, but harmless. That assumption? Very wrong.
When a potato starts sprouting, it’s basically waking up and shifting into growth mode. In that process, it increases certain natural toxins that the plant uses for self-defense. The potato isn’t trying to get you—it’s trying not to get eaten.
Those toxins are glycoalkaloids, mainly solanine and chaconine, and they’re not just science-class trivia. In small amounts, your body can usually handle them without drama. In bigger amounts, they can make you feel pretty awful.
We’re talking nausea, stomach cramps, and headaches—the kind of symptoms that make you regret every life choice that led you to that meal. Not exactly instant doom, but definitely not a vibe.
So yeah, sprouts aren’t just ugly. They’re a little warning sign from your food saying, “Hey, I’ve changed—maybe think twice before you commit to this.”