Edible Portion Calculator

Enter total harvest weight, then remove inedible parts and losses. See edible yield instantly. Save results as CSV or PDF for records.

Label results for printing and recordkeeping.
Use fresh, untrimmed weight if possible.
Choose one unit for all weight fields.
Stems, tops, tough skins, spoiled pieces.
Fine trimming after the main discard weight.
Loss from rinsing, brushing, or draining.
Applies to leafy greens and herbs most.
Used for per-item edible yield.
Change how many decimals are shown.
Clear
Values are estimates. For best accuracy, weigh discards separately.

Example data table

Produce Total (g) Inedible (g) Losses (%) Final edible (g) Edible (%)
Carrots 3000 250 Trim 3, Wash 1, Dry 0 2641 88.0%
Spinach 1200 100 Trim 2, Wash 2, Dry 5 1004 83.6%
Tomatoes 2500 60 Trim 0, Wash 1, Dry 0 2416 96.6%
Use your own weights for reliable planning.

Formula used

  • Base edible = Total weight − Inedible weight
  • After trim = Base edible × (1 − Trim loss%/100)
  • After wash = After trim × (1 − Wash loss%/100)
  • Final edible = After wash × (1 − Dry loss%/100)
  • Edible % = (Final edible ÷ Total weight) × 100
  • Yield factor = Final edible ÷ Total weight
  • Per-item edible = Final edible ÷ Item count
Sequential losses reduce edible weight step-by-step for realism.

How to use this calculator

  1. Weigh your harvested produce before trimming.
  2. Weigh the removed parts and enter inedible weight.
  3. Add optional loss percentages for extra trimming or washing.
  4. Enter item count to estimate edible per piece.
  5. Press Calculate to view results above the form.
  6. Download a CSV or PDF for your garden records.
Track yield factor to improve planting and harvesting plans.

Why edible portion matters in garden planning

Edible portion converts a harvest weight into usable food weight. A 2.0 kg basket can shrink after tops, peels, bruises, and water loss. Tracking yield factor helps you estimate how much to pick for meals, freezing, or sharing, without guessing or overharvesting.

Common loss drivers you can measure

Losses usually come from three steps: discard weight, trimming, and post-wash moisture changes. Root crops often lose 3–10% to peeling and tip removal. Leafy greens may lose 5–15% after washing and drying, depending on grit and wilting. Entering realistic percentages improves repeatability. For squash and cucumbers, the discard weight may be near zero, but wash loss can rise when fruit is heavily soiled.

Using yield factor to scale recipes

Yield factor equals final edible divided by total harvest. If your tomatoes average 0.96, then 5.0 kg harvested gives about 4.8 kg usable. For pesto herbs, a 0.70 factor is common when stems are removed and leaves dehydrate. Save factors by crop and season for faster forecasting. When you know the factor, you can reverse-plan: required harvest = edible target ÷ yield factor.

Recordkeeping for harvest and storage goals

Use the produce name field to log bed, variety, or date, then export CSV for spreadsheets. Compare edible percent across weeks to spot weather effects: hot days can increase drying loss, while rain can add extra wash loss from splashing soil. These notes improve timing and harvesting methods daily. Pair results with storage outcomes, such as jar count or freezer bags, to connect yield with pantry capacity.

Waste weight can support compost decisions

The waste estimate includes inedible parts and processing losses, so it’s useful for compost planning. If you process 10 kg of greens weekly with 25% waste, that’s 2.5 kg for compost or vermiculture. Knowing volumes helps size bins, balance browns, and reduce odor risks. Tracking waste also highlights efficiency wins, like harvesting younger leaves, sharpening knives, or chilling greens before washing to reduce breakage.

FAQs

1) What should I enter as inedible weight?

Weigh stems, tops, peels, spoiled pieces, and any parts you will not eat. If you can’t weigh them, estimate conservatively and refine later using repeated harvest notes.

2) Why are losses applied in sequence?

Trimming, washing, and drying act on what remains after the prior step. Sequential application prevents double-counting and better matches real processing where each stage reduces the available edible mass.

3) How do I choose realistic loss percentages?

Start with small values and adjust after a few batches. Leafy greens often need higher wash and drying losses, while firm fruits may have near-zero trim loss unless damaged or overripe.

4) What does yield factor help me plan?

Yield factor lets you scale harvest needs. If your target edible amount is known, divide it by yield factor to estimate required harvest weight for cooking, preserving, or weekly CSA-style packing.

5) Can I mix units across fields?

No. Choose one unit and enter all weights in that unit. The calculator converts internally for accuracy, but mixing units in inputs will distort the edible percent and waste estimates.

6) Does this work for dried herbs and dehydrated produce?

Yes. Use drying loss to reflect moisture reduction or leaf shrinkage before storage. For full dehydration, drying loss can be high; record your typical values to build consistent, crop-specific factors.

Built for quick harvest notes, meal planning, and compost tracking.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.