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    Coronary artery bypass surgery is sometimes pronounced 'Cabbage(s)'. See also Cabbage car.

    The cabbage (Brassica oleracea Capitata Group) is a plant of the Family Brassicaceae (or Cruciferae). It is herbaceous, biennial, and a dicotyledonous flowering plant with leaves forming a characteristic compact cluster.

    The cabbage is derived from a leafy wild mustard plant, found in the Mediterranean region around 100 AD. The English name derives from the Normanno-Picard caboche ("head"). Cabbage was developed by ongoing artificial selection for suppression of the internode length. The dense core of the cabbage is called the babchka.


        Cabbage
            Uses
                Raw
                Cooked
                Fermented and preserved
                Poultice
            Varieties
            Cultivation
            Related Brassica oleracea varieties
            See also
    NameCabbage
    image
    SpeciesBrassica oleracea
    GroupCapitata Group
    OriginMediterranean, 1st century

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    Uses
    The only part of the plant that is normally eaten is the leafy head; more precisely, the spherical cluster of immature leaves, excluding the partially unfolded outer leaves.
    The so-called 'cabbage head' is widely consumed — raw, cooked, or preserved — in a great variety of dishes, and is thus a leaf vegetable.

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    Raw
    While raw cabbage can be eaten in hand, for most uses it is sliced into thin strips or shredded in to salads or chopped, as in coleslaw.

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    Cooked
    Cabbage is often prepared by boiling, usually as part of soups or stews such as the Central and Eastern European borscht. Boiling tenderizes the leaves, and releases sugars, and develops a characteristic "cabbage" aroma. Indeed, boiled cabbage seems to have fallen out of favor in North America, possibly due to the strong smell released during the cooking, to its image as a food of the poor, or to its reputation for promoting flatulence. Boiled cabbage as an accompaniment to meats and other dishes can be an opportune source of umami, sugars and dietary fiber.

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    Fermented and preserved
    Cabbage is often consumed as sauerkraut. Finely sliced cabbage is mixed with salt and undergoes lactic acid fermentation. Sauerkraut was historically prepared at home, as a way of storing food for the winter; but like other canned and pickled foods is nowadays mainly an industrialized product.

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    Poultice
    Raw cabbage is used as in many traditional medicine treatments to restore circulation and help reduce inflammation. Cabbage paste is wrapped around the area to be treated and this poultice soothes and removes toxins from the injured area for up to one hour per application.

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    Varieties
    There are many varieties of cabbage based on shape and time of maturity. Traditional varieties include "Late Flat Dutch", "Early Jersey Wakefield" (a conical variety), "Danish Ballhead" (late, round -headed). Savoy Cabbage has a round head with crinkled leaves. Red cabbage is a small, round headed type with dark red leaves. Krautman is the most common variety for commercial production of sauerkrauts.

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    Cultivation

    Broadly speaking, cabbage varieties come in two groups, early and late. The early varieties mature in about 50 days. They produce small heads which do not keep well and are intended for consumption while fresh. The late cabbage matures in about 80 days, and produces a larger head.

    Cabbage can be started indoors or sowed directly. Like all brassicae, cabbage is a cool season crop, so early and late plantings do better than those maturing in the heat of the summer.

    Control of insect pests is important, particularly in commercial production where appearance is a driver of success. The pesticides sevin and malathion are both listed for use on cabbage. The caterpillars of some butterflies in the family Pieridae (the "whites") feed on brassicas and can be serious pests.

    Cabbages keep well and were thus a common winter vegetable before refrigeration and long-distance shipping of produce.

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    Related Brassica oleracea varieties
    Besides cabbage proper, the species Brassica oleracea has many distinctive cultivars, which are commonly known by other names: broccoli (Italica Group), cauliflower (Botrytis Group), kale, collard greens, and spring greens (Acephala Group), kohlrabi (Gongylodes Group), brussels sprouts (Gemmifera Group), Chinese kale or Chinese broccoli (Alboglabra Group), broccolini (Italica × Alboglabra Group), and broccoflower (Italica × Botrytis Group).

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    See also

      Chinese cabbage resembles cabbage, but is derived from a different species Brassica campestris
     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cabbage". link