95%
Cucumber yields 95%
You buy cucumber by its whole weight, but you only plate 95% of it. That 5% loss is real cost the invoice never shows — here's the math.
Yield is the fraction of an ingredient that actually reaches the plate after you clean, peel, and trim it. What you pay is the AP (as-purchased) price; what it costs on the plate is the EP (edible-portion) price.
Cores, seeds, and stems are the loss; very little goes to waste here.
Say your invoice shows $1.50 per lb of cucumber (an example AP price).
At 95% yield, your real cost is $1.58 per lb EP — because $1.50 ÷ 0.95 = $1.58.
AP price is illustrative; the EP figure is computed (AP ÷ yield). Use your real invoice price below.Yield breakdown
| As-purchased (AP) | 100% |
|---|---|
| Edible portion (EP) | 95% |
| Lost to trim | 5% |
Source: CIA Standard Yield Tables.
Common questions
What is the yield of cucumber?
Cucumber typically yields 95% edible portion of its as-purchased weight, per the CIA Standard Yield Tables.
How much cucumber is lost to trim?
About 5% of the as-purchased weight is lost to cleaning, peeling, and trimming before it reaches the plate.
How do you calculate the edible-portion cost of cucumber?
Divide the as-purchased price by the yield: EP cost = AP price ÷ 0.95. At 95% yield, the trim makes your real plated cost meaningfully higher than the invoice price.
Market readconfidence low · as of 2026-06-12
About $3.00–$53.50/carton (wholesale reference), down -34.5% over the recent window.
Higher than 10 of its last 26 weekly reads — around the middle of its recent range.
Cheapest in Detroit (~$12.50), priciest in Baltimore (~$29.00).
Hold. Easing — this can be a chance to renegotiate, not a reason to re-price.
One pricing methodology backs the level.
Sources · 2
Sourced: CIA Standard Yield Tables, via the Plate Cost Calculator · what yield means · edible portion