I may be late on this trend, but I'm hearing from our gardening customers that cabbage is the new kale. I'm not much of a greens lover myself, but have always liked the combinations of vegetables in Cole slaw. Cabbage is part of our St. Patrick's day fare and, in Baltimore, a much loved Thanksgiving side as sauerkraut.
My family, (my dad in particular was a meat and potatoes guy), saw few greens other than lettuce served with dinner for our family of eight. When I began working at Valley View Farms in our produce department, I remember being handed a head of cabbage to weigh. I thought it was really heavy lettuce. Thus began my learning about other vegetables.
A few years later, my husband's parents, a German immigrant and his southern belle wife, taught me more about vegetables in the garden and in the kitchen. Collards, kale, and other greens were cooked along side black-eyed peas and cabbage. A new cuisine was introduced to me.
Kale and Broccoli |
Cabbage transplants |
Photo courtesy Baker Creek Heirloom Seed |
Red Jewel F1, a 3-5 pound hybrid cabbage, features round, deep heads with a short core that matures in about 75 days.
Photo courtesy Ball Seed |
China King F1, is a miniature Chinese cabbage with barrel-shaped heads and a yellow interior color. The miniature Napa cabbage can be grown in 55 days from transplant and weighs in at about 2 pounds.
Photo courtesy Ball Seed |
We've been asked to grow Savoy cabbage again and may add it to our offerings this fall or next spring. Savoy Ace F1 has crinkled leaves and a super holding capacity.
Photo courtesy AAS |
In an article on Web MD, cabbage is chock full of vitamins, helps cleanse our gut, provides probiotics when fermented (sauerkraut), helps prevent cancer, keeps blood sugar under control, and provides scores of other benefits. It is indeed a Superfood.
One of our young plant growers offers weekly recipes in a newsletter. Cabbage Soup, a healthy warm dish is just one of several recipes from Bob's Market.
Jan grows greens including kale and Swiss chard in her raised beds. |
I may have to grow some myself this spring in my Earth Box on the patio. Slaw for all this summer!
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