Where did cabbage come from?

- Join the discussion
Home gardening in winter is depressing. There is little in the way of instant seasonal gratification: vegetables in Melbourne grow at a slow and infuriating pace. The last of summer’s harvest that has been ferreted away at the bottom of the freezer runs out. I stare out at the thin tendrils of leek that poke through the mulch and deeply believe that they’re shrinking due to a seasonal disorder.
Looking at SBS’s guide to what is in season, the big winners in winter are cabbage and the rest of the brassica olearacea cultivars: broccoli, kale, brussel sprouts, kohlrabi and cauliflower. What is amazing about them, apart from their love of winter, is that they’re all cultivars of the same plant most of whom were only developed over the last 500 years through the slow process of selection.
In the wild, brassica olearacea is a leafy weed that is indigenous to coastal southern and western Europe. It endures salt and is a poor competitor with other weeds, limiting it to rocky limestone cliffs. It only looks cabbage-like in a very loose sense. It looks strongly like a coastal weed. In all likelihood, it was probably one of the earlier plants in the Mediterranean to have been domesticated in the region. It is not too hard to see that Kale was derived from this coastal weed, through the process of generations of farmers selecting to grow the plants with the largest (or tastiest) leaves.
As with practically every Mediterranean food, its spread around Europe has been ascribed to the Romans because they were the first people to document such things. The Celts probably had an earlier role in the dissemination of brassica around the world because the Latin name brassica seems to be derived from the Celtic word for cabbage, bresic.
The transition of brassica olearacea from a loose bundle of leaves to a tight head of cabbage is described by Brian Baldwin from the University of Saskatchewan as follows:
As time passed, however, some people began to express a preference for those plants with a tight cluster of tender young leaves in the centre of the plant at the top of the stem. Because of this preference for plants in which there were a large number of tender leaves closely packed into the terminal bud at the top of the stem, these plants were selected and propagated more frequently. A continued favouritism of these plants for hundreds of successive generations resulted in the gradual formation of a more and more dense cluster of leaves at the top of the plant. Eventually, the cluster of leaves became so large, it tended to dominate the whole plant, and the cabbage "head" we know today was born. This progression is thought to have been complete in the 1st century A.D. This plant was named Brassica oleracea variety capitata, which translates to "cabbage of the vegetable garden with a head."Similarly, a preference for eating the immature flower buds of brassica favoured the growth of ever larger flowering heads in the plant. By the 1600s, this had been developed into cauliflower and by 1700, broccoli. The last of brassicas to be developed was brussel sprouts, which while referred to in texts from the 1580s, were not cultivated widely around Europe and in the Americas until the 1800s.At about the same time, in a part of Europe near modern Germany, kale plants with short fleshy stems were being selected, resulting in fatter and fatter stems. Selection on this basis eventually led to the ancestral "cabbage" plant developing into the vegetable we know as kohlrabi. The kohlrabi plant was named by botanists as Brassica oleracea variety caulorapa, with the last word meaning, "stem turnip." Both cabbage and kohlrabi have been cultivated for about two thousand years.
As for what to do with the season's cabbages, SBS maintains a solid list of cabbage recipes.
Join the discussion
PLEASE NOTE: All submitted comments become the property of SBS. We reserve the right to edit and/or amend submitted comments. HTML tags other than paragraph, line break, bold or italics will be removed from your comment.
Most Popular
- Industrial Bacon Flu (25)
- The taste of test tube meat (11)
- Spot the Aussie: The imported beer myth (11)
- Makin' Bacon: A guide for city slickers (11)
- Hamburgers: the culinary blank slate.. (10)
- 100 glorious years of MSG (10)
- Self Preservation (10)
- Can our cities feed themselves? (9)
- How influential are Australian food blogs? (8)
- The Taco Truck Wars (7)
About this Blog
A blog about what the world eats, when and where it eats it, and why it matters to us all. Only much less ambitious than that sounds and with more excruciating puns.
Phil Lees grew up in rural Victoria, the first generation in his family to not have lived on the farm and thereby not slaughter their own meat.
In 2005 he moved to Cambodia and started the nation’s first food blog, Phnomenon.com, named after the best pun that he has ever made. It turns out that Cambodian food is delicious and unlike the warnings in most guidebooks, is not likely to kill you with any immediacy. Gridskipper called him a “national treasure”. Lonely Planet’s Greater Mekong guide called him “the unofficial pimp of Cambodian cuisine”. The New York Times laughed at a funny hotdog he saw.
Phil makes a mean sausage, a hoppy pale ale, a modest laksa. He owns three barbecues and is in the market for a fourth.
Other Blogs
TV
- Luke Nguyen's Vietnam
- Behind the Scenes: The 2009 Deadly Awards
- My Family Feast
- Costa's Production Blog
- TV Programs Main Blog
- Swift and Shift Couriers
- Global Village and Thalassa
- My Bogan Diary
- The Road to the White House
Food
- Cooking in the Dangerzone
- The Biggest Chinese Restaurant in the World
- The Beer and Food Files
- Mouthful
- Gourmet Farmer
Films
Documentary
World News Australia
Sport
About SBS
Business
Internet and Technology
Cycling Central
- Mike Tomalaris
- Anthony Tan's Velo Files
- Sydney Bicycle Film Festival
- Matthew Price's Broom Wagon
- Bridie O'Donnell
- Philip Gomes
- Matthew Keenan
- Tarmac Tales
- The red zone with Drapac Porsche
- Ben Day
- John Flynn
Sun 8 Nov 2009 | 
Video
Podcasts
Blogs
Email to friend
Print
Enlarge text







top
Blog Home 
