Gourmand
Where gourmands come to meet/eat.
cabbage

An edible leafy green vegetable.

< read all 4 reviews

crazy for cultivating cabbage

  • Feb 19, 2010
Rating:
+5

Cabbage is known as Brassica oleracea.  Brassica are leaf crops, and are known as “heavy feeders”, which means they require a lot of soil nutrients to grow well. 

 

Rearing cabbage

 

Cabbage seeds are small black and round, which are best sown in trays and transplanted when about 8-10cm tall.

One cabbage needs a lot of space to grow really well. Cutworm tend to chop the seedlings down so it is advisable to plant extra seedlings, which can be thinned out later, when the plants are established.

Most important is preparing the soil right. Cabbage likes a neutral soil, so adding a little agricultural lime to the soil a month before planting is a good practice. Lots of compost, a good mulch and liquid manure will help too.  Use Lucerne or clover as a pre-planting crop to build up the nitrogen availability.

You can put an empty toilet paper spool around the base of the cabbage seedling to protect it.

 

Planting with companions

 

Plant your onions and leeks beside the edges of the bed, along with herbs and flowers like rosemary, thyme, sage, marigold and peppermint. You will find that these strong smelling plants keep pests away. Cabbage likes to be mixed in the beds with beetroots, lettuce, potato, spinach and cauliflower.

Cabbages thrive in the company of Clover, Celery and Chamomile Dandelion is effective as a trap crop, which means that it will draw the aphids away from your cabbage seedlings.

 

Cabbage generally does not tolerate the company of the following plants: Carrot, Climbing beans, Garlic, Hyssop, Rue, Strawberry and Tomato

 

Keeping all these things in mind will lead to successfully grown cabbage.

 

Health benefits

 

Cabbage is known as an effective poultice. Warmed cabbage leaves placed over the breasts of newly lactating mothers, help to release the milk. 

 

Cooking cabbage

 

Try this delicious recipe from Berea Agricultural Group in Lesotho with your freshly grown brassica.

 

Cabbage Stir-Fry

 

Chopped Onion

Chopped Cabbage

2 sliced Bananas

Paprika (to taste)

1 clove Garlic

Salt and pepper.

Grated ginger (optional)

 

Fry the Onion, add the Cabbage, and fry it lightly, stirring it all the time. When it softens slightly, add the Banana and fry some more. Add the Paprika, Garlic, Ginger and Salt and Pepper. Eat and enjoy.

 

crazy for cultivating cabbage

What did you think of this review?

Helpful
0
Thought-Provoking
0
Fun to Read
0
Well-Organized
0
Post a Comment
More Cabbage reviews
Quick Tip by . January 17, 2011
posted in Green Living
A very versatile veggie. I used to eat it all of the time as a kid and I'm trying to get back to it again. Like both raw and cooked.
Quick Tip by . June 01, 2010
posted in Healthy Lifestyle
I honestly wish I liked cabbage. It's the heart of many Raw Foodist dishes.
Quick Tip by . March 15, 2010
posted in Vegan Living
Such a healthy fine cut salad base. I love cabbage steamed/microwaved.
About the reviewer
jeannine davidoff ()
the diverseness of life and living is amazing to me. i am so easily captivated by learning. i am blessed with caring for two teenage girls, who are both talented and light up my life with their musings … more
Consider the Source

Use Trust Points to see how much you can rely on this review.

You
jeanninedavidoff
Your ratings:
rate more to improve this
Recent reviews by jeanninedavidoff
About this food

Wiki

The cabbage is a popular cultivar  of the species Brassica oleracea Linne (Capitata Group) of the Family Brassicaceae (or Cruciferae), and is used as a leafy green vegetable. It is a herbaceous, biennial, dicotyledonous flowering plant distinguished by a short stem upon which is crowded a mass of leaves, usually green but in some varieties red or purplish, which while immature form a characteristic compact, globular cluster (cabbagehead).

The plant is also called head cabbage or heading cabbage, and in Scotland a bowkail, from its rounded shape. The Scots call its stalk a castock, and the British occasionally call its head a loaf. It is in the same genus as the turnip – Brassica rapa L.

Cabbage leaves often display a delicate, powdery, waxy coating called bloom. The sharp or bitter taste sometimes present in cabbage is due to glucosinolate(s). Cabbages are also a good source of riboflavin.
view wiki

Details

First to Review

"crazy for cultivating cabbage"
© 2013 Lunch.com, LLC All Rights Reserved
Lunch.com - Relevant reviews by real people.
Gourmand is part of the Lunch.com Network - Get this on your site
()
This is you!
Ranked #
Last login
Member since
reviews
comments
ratings
questions
compliments
lists