Many fruits come to be known as vegetables? The best guess is that since they’re not sweet, due to the natural sugars in them being low, people who cooked them put them in the vegetable category. There they joined the ranks of true vegetables that come from the leaves, stalks, roots, tubers and bulbs of a plant, or vegetables that are the flower of the plant, like broccoli.
A dish such as ratatouille, made from tomato, eggplant, and squash, is, botanically speaking, just a baked fruit salad.
Olives
olives are a fruit because they come from the flower of the olive tree. A fruit comes from the mature ovary of a plant and the ovary is found in the flower. That’s why all of these vegetables are technically fruit—they grow from a flower.
Eggplant
They are savory and sometimes a little bitter, but never sweet. But not only are eggplants botanically fruits, they are considered berries—very, very large berries.
Pumpkins and Squash
Pumpkins and other types of squash, including zucchini (aka summer squash), start out from a flower on a vine that requires pollination to grow, so they’re technically fruits. If you’re feeling confused, you can also think of fruits as any “fleshy or dry ripened ovary of a flowering plant” that encloses seeds.
Cucumbers
Cucumbers are closely related to pumpkins and squash, and like their cousins, are technically fruit. When you see one hanging from the vine with the flower still attached at the end, it makes some sense, doesn’t it?
Green Beans
Green beans certainly seem like vegetables, don’t they? Maybe if green beans were called a fruit, which is botanically accurate, the kid would be more inclined to eat them. The fruit designation makes sense when you think about it, though; the pods enclose small beans or seeds that sometimes taste sweet and would propagate the species if replanted.
Okra
Okra’s popularity has been growing in the past few years, and while it hasn’t yet earned the status of an “it” vegetable like kale or cauliflower, it may still earn that moniker. If it does, you’ll know it’s really not an “it” vegetable; it’s an “it” fruit. The entire seed-packed pod is edible and can grow up to a length of seven inches.
Peppers
It really seems wrong that peppers are on this list, especially when you realize that something like a habanero—a pepper that’s 70 times hotter than a jalapeño—is technically a fruit. But whether the pepper is on the sweet side like a bell pepper or on the super spicy side like a habanero, they are all derived from a flower and therefore are fruits.