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Kohlrabi is your least favoured vegetable

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We're creatures of comfort when it comes to growing vegetables in our gardens. The perennial favourites; tomatoes, cucumbers, lettuces and cabbage always get a guernsey and the only time we move outside of our preferences is when we experiment with a new variety.

Yet we rarely try a new species. Why is that? Is it because we have no idea what to do with some vegetables? Or, maybe we don't like eating them and therefore won't grow them in favour of our taste buds. Perhaps it has more to do with economics - limited space = demand = supply.

Whatever the reason, kohlrabi is one of the least preferred vegetables to take up space in our veggie patch. Over the past week I've had a poll asking gardeners: Which vegetable WOULDN'T you grow in your vegie patch? And the big winner is...

disliked-vegetables.gif
Broad Beans - 1; Jerusalem Artichokes - 6; Kohlrabi - 9;
Okra - 3; Chokos - 7; Pumpkin - 2.

In fact, pollsters granted okra a better chance to make it into their veggie patches than the humble kohlrabi. It seems this alien looking vegetable either needs a better PR officer or gardeners just really don't appreciate it.

What does Kohlrabi have going for it?

Lots, really. Its colour and shape alone set it apart as one of those gourmet type vegetables that could rival the celeriac and multicoloured silverbeet. From a purely aesthetic purpose they should be a welcome addition to any garden.

Apart from kohlrabi's debonair good looks it's also a great tasting vegetable. Similar to a turnip its flavour is much milder and sweeter and can be substituted in many recipes that require turnips.

How to grow kohlrabi

While kohlrabi may share some similarities with turnips their growing pattern differs completely. Turnips, although a member of the Brassica family, are a root vegetable while Kohlrabi enjoys the sun and grows above ground.

They prefer a typically well-drained soil so if you're gardening in areas prone to clay you may want to lift them above ground level and feed with organic matter. While the leaves may attract snails and slugs they're not the essential part - although can still be eaten as greens - of the vegetable while the ball-shaped fruit is almost pest-resistant.

Kohlrabi are a spring vegetable but they can be sown throughout spring and into early summer and take about 6-8 weeks to harvest.

If you're willing to try something new in your veggie patch, kohlrabi could be a different option.







Comments

I didn't participate in the poll, but kohlrabi would have been my pick, as well---and precisely because I had no clue what I would do with it. I do like turnips, so I might consider growing it. It is an attractive vegetable, so I agree it's got that going for it.

Of course, it's not all that hard to convince me to try growing something new ;-)

Kohlrabi is also great in stirfries, Stuart--mind you I don't grow them, but I do on occasion purchase them, and I love the look of them--veggies from a Dr. Suess garden, to be sure!

I'm convinced and will try it next season! It is always good to try something new. When are you posting a few recipes?

I grow kohlrabi every year, but I have never been too successful with it. It's either too dry or there are too many slugs -- the ones in my garden do eat into the fruit.
Still I love eating it; I find it best stir-fried in butter, slightly salted and topped with some muscat.

Colleen - I thought kohlrabi might have been a vegetable you would have constantly had in the vegie patch. Somehow I envisaged your vegie garden as being a 'little left of centre'. Try it, you will enjoy this one.

jodi - great tip on the stirfry. Yes, I could see Sam-I-Am enjoying a couple of these.

layanee - recipes? I'll be happy to oblige at a later date. Let me know when you're ready to harvest them.

Corinna - if you're having problems with the slugs here's a few snail remedies that may prove helpful.

Also, as kohlrabi grows above ground and is therefore more susceptible to evaporation they will need more watering than what you give turnips, swedes and other root crops.

Hope this helps. BTW - the muscat and butter idea sounds divine.

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