Is It Safe to Eat Green Potatoes?

Quick Answer: Small green spots can be cut away. If the potato is mostly green or green throughout the flesh β€” throw it away. The green indicates elevated solanine levels, which can make you sick.

Why Potatoes Turn Green

Potatoes turn green when exposed to light. The green color itself is chlorophyll β€” the same pigment that makes plants green. Chlorophyll is completely harmless.

However, the same light exposure that produces chlorophyll also triggers the potato to produce solanine, a natural toxin. The green color is essentially a warning sign that solanine levels may be elevated.

When It's Safe to Eat

βœ“ Safe if:
  • Only a small green spot on the skin
  • Green doesn't extend into the flesh
  • You cut away ALL green plus ΒΌ inch extra
  • Potato still tastes normal (not bitter)

When to Throw It Away

βœ— Throw away if:
  • Green color covers most of the potato
  • Green extends deep into the flesh
  • Potato tastes bitter (even after cooking)
  • You're unsure how much to cut away

What Is Solanine?

Solanine is a glycoalkaloid β€” a natural defense chemical potatoes produce to protect against pests and disease. It's concentrated in:

  • Green skin and flesh
  • Sprouts and eyes
  • Areas around damage or bruises

Symptoms of too much solanine: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, stomach cramps, headache, and dizziness. Severe poisoning is rare but possible with large amounts.

Does Cooking Destroy Solanine?

No. Solanine is heat-stable and survives boiling, baking, frying, and microwaving. Cooking does not make green potatoes safe. You must physically remove the green parts.

How to Prevent Potatoes from Turning Green

  • Store in complete darkness β€” a paper bag in a pantry works well
  • Keep cool β€” 45-50Β°F is ideal (not refrigerator cold)
  • Check storage regularly β€” use older potatoes first
  • Buy unwashed potatoes β€” soil coating helps protect from light

The Bottom Line

A little green on a potato isn't the end of the world β€” just cut it away generously. But if your potato looks like it's auditioning to be a lime, toss it. Potatoes are inexpensive; food poisoning is not worth the risk.

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AI-generated content for informational purposes. When in doubt about food safety, throw it out.