I don’t know who decided that Brussels sprouts would be the official vegetable of 2025, but I would like to have a word. Preferably far away from any roasting pan.
Every restaurant menu I glanced at toward the end of the year whether it was holiday prix-fixe, catered luncheons, tasting menus, “chef’s special” situations, was aggressively trying to feed me Brussels sprouts. Shaved. Charred. Roasted. Glazed. Paired with bacon; as if bacon could redeem them. It was relentless. Like the universe whispering, “Have you reconsidered?” No. I have not.
Let me be clear. I do not eat Brussels sprouts. They smell wrong to me. They taste wrong. They look wrong. Something about them feels biologically misaligned with my spirit. They are cabbage-adjacent but smug about it. They arrive sizzling and confident, as if they belong. They do not.
And yet, because I am generous, evolved, and an objectively excellent hostess, I ordered them for my dinner party. For others. I placed them lovingly in the center of the table, nodded approvingly, and pretended they didn’t offend me on a cellular level. This is who I am; someone who will serve you the vegetable she loathes because she wants you to feel nourished and cared for. Growth.
But privately? I felt haunted. Like Brussels sprouts were following me through 2025, popping up uninvited, symbolic of something else entirely. You know the thing you don’t like, don’t want, didn’t ask for but are told is “good for you”? That.
By December, I started to wonder if Brussels sprouts were a metaphor. For compromise. For endurance. For things we politely accept even when our inner voice is screaming absolutely not. I tolerated a lot last year. Some of it necessary. Some of it deeply Brussels sprout–coded.
So as I look ahead to 2026, I have a wish. Not for perfection. Not even for ease. Just fewer Brussels sprouts both literal and figurative. Less forcing myself to acquire tastes that don’t suit me. Less pretending I’ll come around. More honoring what I actually know about myself.
I will still be generous. I will still host beautifully. I will still put things on the table for others that I don’t personally enjoy. But I reserve the right to quietly pass the bowl.
Here’s to a year with vegetables we choose. And to leaving the Brussels sprouts behind.
Categories: Culture, current events, food, identity, Leadership, mental health, Psychology





Dear Lord Perhaps a Simple
Test of Potential Chefhood
i Had to Ask my Wife Where
Brussel Sprouts come from
Oh Dear Lord Hehe It’s
Not Brussels Indeed
Small Cabbages they
Are i Have to be Careful
Not to Swallow Them Whole
As Indeed Hehe There is a Consequence
For Everyone Around For Doing That HAha
Dear Miriam Anyway
i Choose a Meal This
New Year That is More
Lighthearted And Less
DarK Like The 6 O-Clock
Always Forever Ugly News
NoW WHere It Seems Nothing is
Set In Stone Yet What Comes After
Little
Bitty
Cabbages Hehe…
Not Everyone Gets
to Laugh Out Loud
What A Privilege IT
STiLL iS
With
SMiLes..:)
LikeLike
I agree with you completely! I make Brussel sprouts occasionally because my hubby likes them.
LikeLike