Few Christmas foods divide opinion quite like the humble sprout. Mention them at the dinner table and you’ll often hear groans, jokes, or exaggerated childhood trauma stories.
Yet sprouts are not the villain of the Christmas feast — they are, in fact, its most underrated heroes.
Cooked properly, sprouts bring freshness, balance, texture, and a welcome bitterness that cuts through rich roast meats, stuffing, gravy, and all the trimmings. When mistreated, they become sulphurous, soggy, and unfairly blamed. The problem has never been the sprout. The problem has always been how we treat it.
At That’s Christmas 365, we believe it’s time to give sprouts the respect they deserve.
Why Sprouts Belong on the Christmas Table
Sprouts are part of the brassica family, alongside cabbage, broccoli, and kale, vegetables that thrive in cold weather and are at their very best in winter. Christmas is their season.
They earn their place on the plate because they:
Balance rich and fatty foods
Add colour and texture to the meal
Work beautifully with festive flavours like bacon, chestnuts, garlic, butter, and nutmeg
Are packed with fibre and nutrients (a quiet win during a heavy meal)
A Christmas dinner without sprouts is like a tree without lights — technically fine, but missing something traditional and grounding.
How to Choose the Best Sprouts
Perfect sprouts start at the shop, market, or greengrocer.
What to Look For
Firm and tight: The leaves should be compact, not loose or floppy
Bright green: Avoid yellowing or brown edges
Small to medium size: These are sweeter and cook more evenly
Heavy for their size: A sign of freshness
If you can find sprouts still on the stalk, grab them. They stay fresher for longer and look wonderfully festive in the kitchen.
What to Avoid
Strong cabbage smells (a warning sign)
Soft or spongy sprouts
Black spots or excessive leaf damage
Preparing Sprouts Properly (This Matters)
Before cooking, take a few simple steps that make all the difference:
Trim the very base of the stalk
Remove any damaged outer leaves
Rinse briefly in cold water
For larger sprouts, cut a shallow cross in the base or halve them for even cooking
This helps heat penetrate quickly and evenly — which is key to avoiding bitterness.
How to Cook Sprouts to Brassica Perfection
1. Boiling (Yes, But Briefly)
Boiling isn’t the enemy — overboiling is.
Use well-salted water
Cook for 4–6 minutes max
Drain immediately
Steam-dry for a moment before serving or finishing in butter
They should be tender with a slight bite, not army-green and collapsing.
2. Steaming (Clean and Reliable)
Steaming keeps flavour and colour intact.
Steam for 6–8 minutes
Finish with butter, seasoning, and perhaps a pinch of nutmeg or black pepper
Perfect if you want sprouts to taste like sprouts — but at their best.
3. Roasting (The Crowd-Pleaser)
If you’re converting sceptics, this is the method.
Halve sprouts
Toss with olive oil, salt, and pepper
Roast at 200°C (fan) for 25–30 minutes
Add bacon lardons, garlic, or chestnuts halfway through
Roasting brings sweetness, crisp edges, and deep flavour.
4. Pan-Frying or Sautéing (Luxurious and Festive)
Ideal for Boxing Day or smaller Christmas dinners.
Parboil sprouts briefly first
Fry in butter with shallots, pancetta, or nuts
Finish with lemon zest or a splash of stock
This method gives sprouts a rich, glossy finish that feels properly celebratory.
Classic Christmas Pairings That Always Work
Sprouts with bacon and chestnuts
Sprouts with butter and nutmeg
Sprouts with garlic and Parmesan
Sprouts with honey and mustard glaze
These combinations don’t hide the sprout — they elevate it.
The Final Word: Respect the Sprout
Sprouts don’t deserve their bad reputation. They deserve timing, care, and a little love. When treated properly, they’re not just an acceptable side dish they’re essential to the balance and tradition of the Christmas feast.
So this Christmas, don’t apologise for serving sprouts. Cook them well, serve them proudly, and let them shine as the underrated heroes they truly are.
Because Christmas dinner wouldn’t be Christmas without them.

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