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Gardening : Research : Brassicas


Brassicas
I. References to the cabbage family in the Virginia Gazette
II. References to the cabbage family by Virginia authors
III. Discussion
  A.    Late season Round and Flat-sided Cabbages
B.    Early Cabbage Varieties
C.    Red Cabbage
D.    Savoy Cabbage
E.    Musk Cabbage
F.    Madeira Cabbage
G.    Cauliflower
H.    Broccoli
I.    Coleworts, Borecole and Kale
J.    Turnip Cabbage and Turnip Rooted Cabbage
K.    Turnip

I. References to the cabbage family in the Virginia Gazette

Nov. 30, 1759, Christopher Ayscough, gardener to Governor Fauquier: Early Dutch Cabbage, Sugar loaf cabbage, Battersea cabbage, Large Winter cabbage, Red cabbage, Yellow Savoy cabbage, Green Savoy cabbage, Early colliflower, Late colliflower, Colliflower broccoli, Purple broccoli, Curled colewort, Large English turnip, Early Dutch turnip.

March 26, 1767, William Wills, Richmond, John Donley, Petersburg: Early York Cabbage, Early Sugar Loaf Cabbage,
Early Battersea Cabbage, Large Winter Cabbage, Savoys Red Cabbage, Colliflower, Colliflower Broccoli, Purple Broccoli, Winter and Summer Colewort, Turnips, summer and winter of various sorts

March 10, 1768, William Wills, Richmond, John Donley, Petersburg: Sugar Loaf Cabbage, Battesea Cabbage,
Russia Cabbage, Savoy, Early Dutch Cabbage, Early Yorkshire Cabbage, Red Cabbage, Winter Cabbage, Colliflower, Broccoli, Broccoli Colliflower,
Green, White and Yellow Broccoli, Red Ring Turnip, White Round Turnip

Dec. 31, 1772, John Carter Store, Williamsburg: Large Cabbage, Large English Cabbage, Early dwarf sugar loaf cabbage, Best colliflower, Green Brocoli, Purple Brocoli.

Jan. 7, 1773, John Carter Store, Williamsburg: White round turnip.

Dec. 16, 1773, John Carter Store, Williamsburg: Battersea Cabbage, Large sugar loaf cabbage, Yorkshire Cabbage, Hanover turnip.

Jan. 3, 1774, James Wilson, Gardener at W&M College: Early Yorkshire Cabbage, Early Battersea Cabbage, Early Sugar Loaf Cabbage, White Dutch Cabbage, Red Cabbage, Large Hollow Cabbage, Green Savoy, Yellow Savoy, Purple Brocoli, White Brocoli, Early Cauliflower, Late Cauliflower, Early Dutch Turnip, Norfolk Turnip, Early Green Turnip, Round Red Turnip.

Oct. 10, 1771, Mr. Campbell's Store, Richmond: Common Cabbage, Green Savoy Cabbage, Early yellow Savoy Cabbage, Early yellow loaf Cabbage, Italien Brocoli, Colliflower, Curled Green kail, Summer turnip.

Mar. 7, 1792, Milton Collins, Richmond: Early Cabbage & Late Cabbage, Early sugar loaf Cabbage & Late sugar loaf Cabbage, Large Winter Cabbage & Scotch Cabbage, Madeira Cabbage, Red cabbage to pickle, Early purple brocoli & Late purple brocoli, Early cauliflower & Late cauliflower, Early Dutch & summer turnip, Early Hanover turnip, Large field turnip.

Oct. 17, 1792, Milton Collins, Richmond: Early York Cabbage, sugar loaf Cabbage, Battersea Cabbage, Scotch Cabbage, Madeira Cabbage, Brocoli, cauliflower.

II. References to the cabbage family by Virginia authors:

1793, John Randolph, Treatise on Gardening: White Cabbage, Sugar loaf Cabbage, Battersea Cabbage, Russia Cabbage, Musk Cabbage, Savoy Cabbage, Turnep Cabbage, Roman (Italian) Brocoli, Cauliflower, Curled Colewort, Common Colewort, White Turnep, Purple Turnep.

1786, Joseph Prentis, Monthly Kalender & Garden Book: Cabbage, Savoy Cabbage, Purple Brocoli, White Brocoli, Colliflower, Colewort, Turnep.

1757 - 1771, Landon Carter's Diary, Sabine Hall: Sugarloaf Cabbage, Savoy Cabbage, Large Late Dutch Cabbage, Early Cabbage, Cauliflower, Naval Officer Lee's Cauliflower, Brocoli, English Brocoli, Coleflower Brocoli, Colewort, Large field Colewort (Brassica arvensis), Turnep Cabbage, Stewart's Turnep, Campbell's Turnep, Norway Turnep, Reynold's Turnep, Napir Turnep, Battersea Turnep, Green Turnep, Dutch Turnep, Winter Turnep, Keil.

Circa 1737, William Byrd II, Natural History of Virginia: White Cabbage, Red Cabbage, Smooth Savoy Cabbage, Curled Red Cabbage, Curled Green Cabbage, Cauliflower.

1786, Lady Jane Skipwith of Prestwould: Large Winter Cabbage, Large Scotch Cabbage, Late Sugar loaf Cabbage, Early Sugar Loaf Cabbage.

1797 – 98, Diary or Major Thomas Jones Essex Co.:
Forward Cabbage, Savoys, York Cabbage, Large Cabbage,
Early Sugar Loaf Cabbage, Drumhead Cabbage, Large White Winter Cabbage, Cauliflower Brocoli, Colewort, Siberian Borecole, Turnip Cabbage, Large White Turnip

1807, Lady Skipwith of Prestwould: Madeira Cabbage, Red Dutch Cabbage, Drumhead Cabbage, Early York Cabbage, Large Winter Cabbage, Cauliflower, Brocoli.

III. Discussion

The Cabbage family has one of the longest histories of all European vegetables. Most botanists agree that all of our modern Brassicas were developed from the wild sea kale (B. oleracea, var., sylvestris) that is native along the sea coast of western and southern Europe. The Jews apparently did not know this plant for there is no reference to cabbage in the Bible. The Greeks and Romans certainly did and several varieties are mentioned as both medicinal and culinary plants by Cato, Pliny, Columella, Dioscorides, Theophrastus and others. The primitive forms of cabbage, generally known as coleworts, provided the most important green for the medieval potage and remained one of the primary greens in the diet well into the 17th century. The Countrey Farme (1616) is a translation of the French Maison rustique. This work was first published in Latin as Praedium Rusticum in 1554 by Charles Estienne. His son-in-law, the physician Jean Leibult, published the French version in 1564 which, in turn, was translated to English by Surflet in 1616. Of coleworts he writes: “First of all we are to speake of Coeworts, both because they are most common, and also most aboundant of all other sorts of hearbs.” He also writes of the emerging closed headed coles, known as cabbages today, which are just starting to emerge in 16th England as a separate crop. They are described as: “Cabbage-colewort, which are called white or apple Coleworts.”

Cabbages were introduced to Virginia with the first settlers at Jamestown. Alexander Whitaker in his treatise titled Good Newes from Virginia, (1612), writes, "Our English seeds thrive very well heare, as Peas, Onions, Turnips, Cabbages, Coleflowers," (etc.). By the 18th century there are a wide variety of cabbages known in Williamsburg. Alexander Byrdie advertises in the Virginia Gazette that he has "just received by the Latona from London and the Peace from Bristol a well chosen variety of Garden seeds which are warrented to be of the latest crop, including, Cabbages - 22 kinds."

As the list of 18th century references to cabbage and other Brassica varieties demonstrate, this was a very important group of plants to colonial Virginians. There are more varieties of Brassicas listed by local sources than any other garden vegetable. They were used for both animal and human food and were planted out on a large scale on colonial plantations.

Most 18th century varieties of Brassica have disappeared. Cabbages, in particular, are difficult to save seed from because of their biennial nature as well as the fact that all cabbages require cross pollination. Consequently, more individual plants need to be set aside to produce viable seed than a self fertile plant such as a pea or bean.

A: Late season Round and Flat-sided Cabbages:

This is the oldest group of cabbages and comprise the larger and later varieties of heading cabbages. Heading cabbages are known in Germany by 1150 and may have been introduced into England as early as the 14th century. An early reference that seems to distinguish between cabbage and colewort (coleworts were probably known in England by the first century AD) comes in William Caxton's Vitas patrum (1495), "He laboured the gardins, sewe the seedes for cabochis, and coleworts." The first use of the scientific name for cabbage is found in John Baret's An alvearie or triple dictionarie (1580), "Cabage or cole cabege, brassica capitata." However, the first cabbages in England may have been of a very primitive form or perhaps of limited distribution until late in the 16th century. Thomas Hill, in The Gardeners Labyrinth, (1577), does not make a clear reference to cabbaging types of Cole and John Evelyn writes in Acetaria, A Discourse of Sallets, (1699), 'Tis scarce an hundred Years since we first had Cabbages out of Holland. Sir Anth. Ashley of Wiburg St. Giles in Dorsetshire, being (as I am told) the first who planted them in England."

The first pictorial evidence of cabbaging coles in England come from Gerard's Herball or General Historie of Plants, (1597), in which he pictures the White Cabbage Cole, a large winter cabbage, very round with a white interior that he says "is the great ordinarie Cabbage knowne every where, and as commonly eaten all over this kingdom." Parkinson, in Paradisis in Sol, (1629) pictures several cabbage varieties and calls the large round cabbage Ordinary Cabbage. By 1693, when John Evelyn publishes the translation of the Frenchman De La Quintinye's The Compleat Gard'ner, there are at least six varieties of cabbage cultivated in gardens and the white or bright is the common late round variety sown for winter or early spring use.

The varieties of cabbages listed in the survey of 18th century Virginia references that most likely fall into the late cabbage category are: Large Winter, Large, Large English, Common or White, and Late. By the 18th century the flat and long sided varieties of common cabbage appear. Philip Miller, in the 1754 edition of The Gardeners Dictionary, includes in the list of cabbages fit for winter use, Common White, flat, and long sided. The flat cabbage often goes by the name of Dutch Cabbage and, late in the century, as Drumhead Cabbage. Stephen Switzer, in The Practical Kitchen Gard'ner, (1727), writes of the Dutch as" being the flatest and largest of all, and a very large and flat cabbage." It is possible that by the late 18th century the flat sided cabbage had largely replaced the older, rounder varieties. John Randolph, in A Treatise on Gardening, (1793), writes, "The common WHITE CABBAGE, capitata alba, is the proper sort for winter. It is long sided and flat."

The references to cabbage varieties that seem to refer specifically to this type in the survey are: White Dutch , Large Late Dutch) and Drumhead. Cabbages, particularly the larger and later varieties, are commonly used as cattle food. The Scotch Cabbage (Collins, Skipwith), appears to be almost exclusively grown for livestock. In a 1771 catalog published in London titled, A Catalogue of Seeds, Plants, Fruit-Trees and Flower-Roots sold by James Gordon, Seedsman, he lists, under cabbage varieties, "Large Scotch for Cattle." In J.C. Loudon's An Encyclopedia of Agriculture, (1829), he lists the Scotch Cabbage as a "field cabbage for Cattle." George Washington grows field cabbages between his corn rows. On March 15, 1788 he records in his diary that he plants in the corn rows Scott's Cabbage, which is likely a misspelling of the Scotch Cabbage. Lady Skipwith orders, on March 24, 1798, "2 lb large Scotch Cabbage seed such as farmers cultivate to feed cattle." This is apparently a very large cabbage for it is described in John Abercrombie's Every Man his own Gardener, (1782) as Giant or Large Scotch.

These large cabbages raised for livestock were an important crop for the husbandman. The Complete Farmer, published by A Society of Gentlemen in London in 1769 compares the value of the Scotch Cabbage to turnips for feeding livestock: “If an ox be allowed to eat nine stone a day this is, twelve cabbages, then six oxen will live three months on one acre of them; so that supposing one acre of turnips, raised in the common method of husbandry, to be sufficient during the same space of time for two oxen, we may still expect, in proportion, three times more benefit from the cabbages then from the turnips.”

The Dutch cabbage is another large variety that is commonly used for cattle feed. On March 16, 1767 Landon Carter records in his diary that he orders, "Large late Dutch Cabbage - 5 pounds" (seed). On October 27 of the same year he has several areas of his plantation measured, "From the lower to the upper corner of the Cabage ground: 62 pole," (403 ft.). The amount of seed ordered and the large fields planted for cabbage may indicate use as cattle feed. Walter Nicol, who writes The Scotch Forcing and Kitchen Gardener (1798) lists this cabbage as, "Large broad Dutch for cattle." Stephen Switzer in Practical Kitchen Gardener, (1727), cautions that this cabbage is fit only for large families and William Cobbett writes in The English Gardener, (1829), that, "The drumheads, and other large cabbages, are wholly unfit for a garden."

In the colonies, we continue to use the large Dutch or Drumhead cabbages as table fare. Robert Squibb, The Gardeners Calendar, (1778), Gardiner and Hepburn, The American Gardener, (1804), McMahon, The American Gardener's Calendar, (1806), and Bridgeman, Young Gardener's Assistant, (1850) all list the Dutch or Drumhead cabbages as garden vegetables without prejudice. Indeed, Fearing Burr, in Field and Garden Vegetables of America, (1865) writes of the Bergen Drumhead [same as the American Cabbage listed by Washington (1788) and McMahon (1806)], "notwithstanding its extraordinary proportions, is tender, well flavored, and of more than average quality for family use."

Peter Henderson, in Gardening For Profit (1867) writes of the Bergen Drumhead, "This is the variety grown for the general crop, it is of the largest size, sometimes almost round, though more generally flattened at the top." He also observes that this is a more cold hardy variety than the Flat Dutch. These large late season varieties have been largely replaced by smaller, shorter season cabbages today. The Brunswick and Late Flat Dutch are heirloom varieties that probably best illustrate the type.

B.    Early Cabbage Varieties

This group includes the cabbage varieties sown primarily for summer use. Cabbages of this type in the survey are: Sugar loaf, Battersea, Early York or Yorkshire, Early Dutch, and Russia.

The most frequently recorded cabbage variety in 18th century Virginia is the Sugar loaf. There are both early and late varieties of this plant but the early variety seems to be the most common sort. Philip Miller, in the Gardeners Dictionary (1754) says "Sugar-loaf Cabbages are commonly sown for Summer-use, and are what the Gardeners about London commonly call Michaelmas Cabbages." However, with both early and late varieties available to gardeners in Williamsburg this very popular cabbage could be used almost year round. John Randolph writes in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), "But the SUGAR LOAF, which is the finest, will remain a considerable time," (compared to the Battersea). "These should be sown every month and transplanted every season."

This is perhaps the oldest variety of early season cabbage. Gerard, in the Herball (1597) does not list the sugar loaf cabbage but Parkinson, in Paradisi in Sol (1629), does and explains its name by saying that it is smaller at the top than at the bottom, ie, like a sugar loaf. Philip Miller in The Gardeners Dictionary (1754) describes it as "Brassica capitata alba pyramidalis." Almost all of the early cabbages have this sugar loaf form but the Sugar Loaf variety seems to evolve into an inverted cone over time. Fearing Burr in Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865) says, "The color of this variety and the form of its head, distinguish it from all others. The plant, when well developed, has an appearance not unlike some of the varieties of Cos lettuces; the head being round and full at the top, and tapering thence to the base, forming a tolerably regular inverted cone." MM.. Vilmorin-Audrieux, who wrote The Vegetable Garden, translated to English by W. Robinson (1885), agrees with this description.

The Sugar loaf seems to disappear late in the 19th century. Robinson observes in The Vegetable Garden (1885) that although this is a very old and well known cabbage it is rarely cultivated any longer in Europe.

The Battersea cabbage is a cone shaped cabbage that matures earlier than the Sugar loaf. It was developed in the early 18th century by market gardeners in the Battersea region near London. Evelyn does not mention this cabbage in Acetaria (1693) but it is described in Stephen Switzer's Practical Kitchen Gardener (1727) who writes that it is "raised in Battersea, the Devizes and other places." Richard Bradley in New Improvements of Planting & Gardening (1731) lists it as a variety of "White Cabbage of which the Gardeners at Battersea in Surry have a kind that comes very early, and is the best for Summer." It is somewhat larger than the Sugar loaf according to William Cobbett who writes in The American Gardener (1821) that while Sugar loaf cabbages may be spaced at 20", the Battersea should be spaced at 30". The draw back to this variety is that it does not last long in the field. This is expressed by many authors, including John Randolph who writes in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), "The BATTERSEA CABBAGE is the earliest of all, and head in a short time, and burst if not cut soon."

The Early York or Yorkshire cabbage was introduced to English gardeners in the middle of the 18th century. Fearing Burr, in Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865), writes, "According to Rogers, the Early York Cabbage was introduced into England from Flanders, more than a hundred years ago, by a private soldier named Telford, who was there many years in the reign of Queen Anne. On his return to England, he settled as a seedsman in Yorkshire; whence the name and celebrity of the variety." The Early York cabbage is not listed by Miller in the Gardeners Dictionary in either the 1754 or 1768 edition. It is listed by Abercrombie, Every Man his own Gardener (1779), and, in Williamsburg, the Yorkshire cabbage is advertised at the John Carter store in 1773. It is a somewhat darker and smaller cabbage than either the Sugar loaf or Battersea. William Cobbett, in The American Gardener (1821) recommends only a 16" spacing for this cabbage. While still a conical head it tends towards roundness in its apex. The Early York remains a very popular cabbage in the United States well into the 19th century. Fearing Burr (1865) writes, "In this country it is one of the oldest, most familiar, and, as an early market sort, one of the most popular, of all the kinds now cultivated." Peter Henderson, in Gardening For Profit (1867), writes of the Early York, "This well-known variety is more universally cultivated than all others." However, for market garden purposes, he writes this it has largely been replaced by the Jersey Wakefield.

The Early Dutch cabbage is most likely an early round variety. Dutch cabbage, as an individual variety, is difficult to trace because so many of the first cabbage varieties in England came from the Netherlands. Stephen Switzer, in The Practical Kitchen Gardener (1727) lists a Dutch cabbage that comes in with the Sugar loaf and John Hill in Eden: or, A Compleat Body of Gardening (1757), lists a variety he calls, Dutch, or "the earliest sort." It is likely a cabbage similar to Burr's, Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865), Early Low Dutch. Amelia Simmons, in American Cookery (1796) also refers to "a low Dutch cabbage." Burr describes Dutch cabbage as a well known variety that is round, of medium size with a solid head and blistered leaves sometimes tinged brown at the top.

The Russia cabbage is another cabbage of obscure origin. Most cabbage varieties before the middle of the 18th century appear to originate in mainland Europe. John Evelyn writes in Acetaria, A Discourse of Sallets (1699); “the best sorts [cabbages] come from Denmark and Russia.” The Russia cabbage is first mentioned in Switzer's Practical Kitchen Gardener (1727) who lists it with the Battersea as a small, early type of cabbage and says the seed comes from Denmark or Hamburg. Philip Miller, in the Gardeners Dictionary (1754), writes, "The Russian Cabbage was formerly in greater Esteem than at present, it being now only to be found in Gentlemen's Gardens, who cultivate it for their own Use, and is rarely ever brought to the Market." One reason for its obscurity may be that it is difficult to raise seed in England so, as Miller writes, "it is necessary to procure fresh Seeds from abroad every Year; for it is apt to degenerate in England in a few Years." It is a small, hard, early cabbage (July-August in England) that is probably not known in the colonies. It is listed by several English authors but mentioned only in Randolph's A Treatise on Gardening (1793), in America, and he writes only, "There is a Cabbage which is called the RUSSIA kind. They are very small and soon degenerate, if the seed is not changed."

There are only a few early season varieties available today that approximate the many varieties of early cabbage known in the 18th century. One of the oldest surviving members of this group is the French Ox-heart. Jefferson sends this cabbage from Paris to Francis Eppes in 1786. Fearing Burr, in Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865) describes the Small Ox-Heart as intermediate between the Yorks and Drumheads; more nearly, however, resembling the former. He also writes that it is about ten days later than the York. The Winnigstadt is an early cabbage with a sharp, somewhat open apex. The Jersey Wakefield is perhaps the best known early cabbage grown today and dates to the first half of the 19th century. It is a somewhat earlier cabbage than the Ox-heart or Winningstadt and has a pointed head tending to roundness at the apex. Like the Battersea cabbage of the 18th century, it has a tendency to burst if left in the ground too long. The Glory of Enkhuizen is an heirloom, early season, flat cabbage that may be used to approximate the early Dutch. Copenhagan is an early 19th century round variety that would be considered and early season cabbage in the 18th century.

C.    Red Cabbage

The red cabbages appear to be as old as the larger, late season white cabbages. They are described in Germany as early as 1150 and a red cabbage is pictured in Leonhart Fuchs's Codex, completed around 1563 but never published. This is not the solid red cabbage we are familiar with today but a green cabbage with red veins and red fringes on the leaves, especially towards the heart of the plant. This is a trait that probably remains through the 18th century for as late as 1885, the Red Dutch cabbage is described in Vilmorin's Vegetable Garden , as "a red cabbage, sometimes mixed with green." Gerard lists a Red Cabbage Cole in his Herball (1597) and says it is smaller than the white. It is listed by virtually every garden writer after that time. The Red Cabbages are used almost exclusively for pickling for, as Burr observes about the Red Dutch in his Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865), "On account of its dark color when cooked, it is seldom used in the manner of the common cabbages, but is chiefly used for pickling, or, like the other red sorts, cut in shreds, and served as a salad." Bernard McMahon, in The American Gardener's Calender (1806), lists this cabbage simply as the Red Pickling and it is advertised in the Virginia Gazette by Milton Collins (1792) as "Red cabbage to pickle." It is a very late season cabbage which, according to Miller in the Gardeners Dictionary (1754) and Gardiner and Hepburn, The American Gardener (1804) is sown in March with the early cabbages but does not mature until the following winter.

One of the oldest and most common varieties of this sort is the Red Dutch. The Red Danish is probably the best variety to approximate this cabbage available today.

D.    Savoy Cabbage

The Savoy cabbage is named for the former Duchy of Savoy which was a small province lying between Italy and France. It is thought that the Savoy cabbage was brought from Italy to France late in the 16th century by Marie de Medici who was married to King Henry IV of France. It arrives in England soon after for two Savoys are described by Gerard in his Herball (1597). Savoys are distinguished from other varieties by a milder flavor, looser head and by the crinkled or blistered appearance of their leaves. The original Savoys had both smooth and curled leaf forms. Gerard lists a Savoy Cole and a Curled Savoy Cole. William Byrd II lists a smooth savoy in his Natural History of Virginia (1737). Modern Savoys are usually of the curled sort (referring to the undulations on the outer leaf margins). Fearing Burr, in Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865), says the "Green Globe Savoy or Green Curled Savoy has been long in cultivation, and become the standard sort." It also has the blue green coloration typical of most Savoys known today.

The original Savoys had somewhat looser heads than our modern Savoys. Gerard describes the Savoy Cole in 1597 "as numbered among the headed Coleworts or Cabbages...but when they come to the shutting up they stand at stay, and rather show themselves wider open, than shut any nearer together." His illustration shows a cabbage very much like a Cos lettuce in form. Amelia Simmons agrees with this description in American Cookery (1796), writing, "The Green Savoy, with the richest crinkles, is fine and tender; and altho' they do not head like the Dutch or Yorkshire, yet the tenderness of the cut leaves is a counterpoise."

The Savoy is used primarily as a winter Cabbage. John Randolph in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), writes, "The SAVOY CABBAGES, which are esteemed best, when pinched by the frost, are to be treated in the same manner as the white, only they may be planted nearer one another, not being a long sort."

While the green variety seems to be the most common type there is also a yellow variety that is almost as popular. Amelia Simmons writes that the yellow is "next in rank, but will not last long."

There are several green Savoy varieties of cabbage available today though they all have very tight round heads rather than the somewhat open heads described above. A Dutch variety of Savoy, Bloemendaalse gele, slobberkool, is an upright, open varietyof yellow savoy that agrees with the 18th century descriptions very well. It is also a very long season cabbage, typically taking 230 days from seed to harvest. Many varieties of 18th century Brassicas show this trait of exceptionally long seasons compared to modern cabbages. Bloemendaasel gele is an old variety that is seldom grown in the Netherlands any longer that probably dates to the middle of the 19th cemtury. Bloemendaal was an important agricultural center behind the dunes that supplied produce to the Haarlem and Amsterdam markets in the 17th and 18th century. Another Dutch variety called Westlandse Putjes is a smaller, up right green savoy with an open top. While neither of these varieties can be dated to the 18th century, they both illustrate the phenotype of the 18th century form.

E.    Musk Cabbage

The Musk cabbage is listed only by Miller (Gardeners Dictionary), in England and Randolph (A Treatise on Gardening), in America. Both authors describe it as a very fine cabbage. Randolph writes, "There is a MUSK CABBAGE, remarkable for its tasting like musk, and is to be treated in the common manner. I have met with these in Virginia, but Miller says they are not propagated much in England, tho' the most delicious." This information comes from Philip Miller's Gardeners Dictionary who writes in the 1754 edition, "The Musk-cabbage has, through Negligence, been almost lost in England, though for eating it is one of the best Kinds we have." By the end of the century it had disappeared altogether. Thomas Martyns, who continued to update and enlarge Miller's Gardeners Dictionary into the 19th century writes in The Gardener's and Botanist's Dictionary (1807) that this cabbage is now lost due to the fact that it is not winter hardy in England.

F.    Madeira Cabbage

This cabbage appears in the survey late in the 18th century and early in the next. This is an intriguing cabbage that is not listed by any English author that I can discover. Madeira is a Portuguese island off the coast of Morocco. There is a curious little cabbage called the Portugal Cabbage that is of ancient lineage and may represent one of the very first heading varieties of cabbage. Weaver, in Heirloom Vegetable Gardening (1997), has found that John Evelyn first acquired seed for this cabbage in 1728 under the name of Coves Murcianus. It is apparently lost to English cultivation and then reintroduced in 1821 only to be lost again because it did not stand the English winters (Gardener's Magazine, 1827, 434-35). The introduction date of the Portugal cabbage to this country is thought to have been in the 1840's. Presumably, the Madeira cabbage was introduced to America through the very active Madeira Trade late in the 18th century and it is intriguing to speculate that the Madeira cabbage advertised by Milton Collins in 1792 may represent an earlier introduction of the Portugal cabbage.

William Cobbett., in A Journal of a Year’s Residence in the United States of America (1818) gives a comparison of size (spacing) and length of season for a number of cabbage varieties. Recommended spacing: “Early Salisbury 12”, Early York 15”, Battersea 20”, Sugar loaf 24”, Savoy’s 2 ½’, Drum-head, Thousand-headed, Large Hollow, Ox Cabbage 4’. “ From transplant to harvest: “Early Salisbury 6wks, Early York 8 wks, Early Battersea 10 wks, Sugar Loaf 11 wks, Late Battersea 16 wks, Red Kentish 16 wks, Drum-head, Thousand-headed, Large Hollow, Ox, Savoy – 5 months.”

 

G.    Cauliflower

The Cauliflower appears to have been developed in Cypress or the Levant and is introduced to Italy around 1490. It may represent a degenerate form of the Portugal cabbage. According to Martyns in the Gardener's and Botanist's Dictionary (1807), it appears in the London markets around 1680. It was certainly known before this time but perhaps not as a commercial crop. Cauliflower is not listed in Fuchs, De Historia Stirpium (1542) or in Hill's The Gardener's Labyrinth (1577), but John Gerard does describe the "Cole Florie or Colleflore" in the Herball (1597). It immediately becomes a great favorite, at least with gentleman gardeners, which is evident in Gerard' description of the plant, "The white Cabbage is best next unto the Cole-florey; yet Cato doth chiefly commend the russet Cole: but he knew neither the white ones, nor the Cole-florey: for if he had, his censure had been otherwise." Parkinson agrees with Gerard, writing in Paradisi in Sol (1629), of the Coleflower, "this hath a much pleasanter taste then eyther the Colewort, or Cabbage of any kind." Throughout the 17th century the English relied on seed imported from continental Europe but by the 18th century, according to Philip Miller in The Gardeners Dictionary (1754), the English are raising some of the finest cauliflower in Europe. He writes, "Cauliflowers have of late Years been so far improved in England, as to exceed in Goodness and Magnitude what are produced in most Parts of Europe."

Cauliflower is introduced to Virginia at a very early date, being recorded by Whitaker in Good Newes from Virginia (1612), but it appears to be a vegetable found primarily in gentleman's gardens throughout the colonial period. The Rev. John Banister records in the 1680's that in Virginia, "We have all sorts of salleting and potherbs, as also Coleworts, Cabbage, Asparagus, and in some gardens Artichokes and Collyflowers." In early 18th century North Carolina John Lawson records in A New Voyage to Carolina (1709), “The Colly-Flower we have not yet had an opportunity to make Tryal of.” In Williamsburg John Randolph, in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), gives three and one half pages to Cauliflower, indicating its popularity, particularly among gentlemen by this time.

Cauliflower, compared to the other members of the Cabbage family, can be difficult to grow, especially to grow well. Randolph writes in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), "CAULIFLOWERS, must be sown critically to a day, or else there is no dependence on the success of them." Landon Carter records in his diary on April 29, 1771, "Now but a very few of Naval Officer Lee's Cauliflower seed sown in March are come up. Perhaps they should have been sown in warm places or hot beds." Hot beds and glasses are often recommended for the cultivation of cauliflower and this is the likely reason they are more common in gentleman's gardens who have the leisure to experiment. There are very few varieties listed for the cauliflower, most authors mentioning only the early and the late cauliflower. The modern cauliflower seems to be very similar in appearance to the cauliflower known in the 18th century.

H.    Broccoli

Broccoli, at least in its asparagoides form, may be even more ancient than cauliflower. Broculus is listed next to coleworts in the circa 1500 seed catalog, Herbys necessary for a gardyn by letter, attributed to Fromond. Robinson, in his translation of Vilmorin's Vegetable Garden (1885), writes, "the cultivation of broccoli dates back to a more remote period than that of Cauliflower, as the name, at least, would lead us to believe." What he is referring to is the Latin root for the word broccoli that refers to the young flower shoots of cabbages or turnips. These have been used for many centuries by Italian gardeners who were responsible for creating the first distinct forms of broccoli. Giacomo Castelvetro records in The Fruits, Herbs & Vegetables of Italy (1614) that “Sprouting broccoli… come [from] the tender shoots which grow on the stalks of cabbage or cauliflower plants left in the garden over the winter.” This is an ancient practice in Italy. Pliny writes in Natural History, Book XIX, section XLI (c. 70 AD) of cabbage: “In the next spring after its first sowing it yields sprout-cabbage; this is a sort of small sprout from the actual cabbage stalks, of a more delicate and tender quality.” This practice is also common in the 18th century. Stephen Switzer writes in The Practical Kitchen-Gardener (1727): “I need say little of the sprouts that come form old cabbage-stalks, they being well known to produce very tender and very excellent kele in spring.

Fearing Burr speculates in Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865) that unlike cauliflower, which seems to arise from the Portugal cabbage, broccoli is developed from the “Chou cavalier, or tall, open Cabbage,” similar to the “Tall Curled Kale.” J.C. Loudon writes in the Encyclopedia of Gardening (1822) that broccoli first came to Europe in the mid 16th century. However, Broccoli is not listed by Fuchs (1542), Hill (1577), Gerard (1597) or Parkinson (1629) so even if it was known in some quarters it was of very limited distribution. The first reference to broccoli by an English writer that I can find comes from Evelyn's Acetaria (1699) who calls it "The Broccoli from Naples."

A New System of Agriculture, first published by John Laurence in Dublin in 1726, records: “The Brocauli is an Italian Plant, brought lately from Rome by the present Earl of Burlington, who has given it a Reputation among those who love Novelties…Although it is of the Cauli Kind; yet it requires a particular Management, and therefore particular Directions.  Many ignorant of the Plant, will be sowing it in the Spring; but it should not be sown till about Midsummer, and not much after…that it may attain Strength to get over the Winter.”  The original forms of broccoli exhibited the biennial flowering cycle of most Brassicas and had to go over the winter to form their sprouts, spring planted broccoli gives only leaves and no sprouts. The following year, Stephen Switzer writes in Practical Kitchen Gardener (1727), that broccoli "has been, till within these few years, a stranger in England." He also writes that the seed comes from Venice or Naples and calls it "Italian Asparagus" saying there are three forms; one having curled leaves and sprouts like asparagus, another with paler leaves and "sprouts like the red kind," and the rarest sort which has sprouts like small cauliflowers. Philip Miller in the The gardeners and florists dictionary (1724) refers to it by the names sprout colli-flower or Italian Asparagus. By the 1754 edition of the Gardeners Dictionary, Miller lists, "several Kinds; viz. The Roman, Neapolitan, and black Broccoli, with some others." He also speaks of "The brown Broccoli," saying "it is by many Persons greatly esteemed, tho' it doth not deserve a Place in the Kitchen garden, where the Roman Broccoli can be obtained, which is much sweeter." He also writes of "The Naples Broccoli," which "hath white Heads, very like those of the Cauliflower." In his list of Brassica species he also includes "The green Broccoli" as distinct from the Italian broccoli, calling it "BRASSICA capitata virescens Italica crispa," which is likely a reference to the archaic forms of tall Kale (crispa) varieties from which the modern broccoli is derived.

By the end of the 18th century, shorter season broccoli varieties were developed that could be grown in a single season, though they would still be considered long season plants compared to the modern green broccoli. Ellis records four varieties of broccoli in The gardener’s pocket-calendar (1776): “Early Purple, Purple, Black” and the “Cauliflower broccoli.” The Early Purple was harvested in November from a spring sowing while the last three were harvested from early winter to spring.

Although several sorts of broccoli are know in Virginia, the purple or Roman appears to be the most common. John Randolph writes in A Treatise on Gardening (1793) that "The Roman Brocoli is the proper sort to cultivate, otherwise called the Italian Brocoli," saying "that they will have purple heads." William Cobbett speculates in The English Gardener (1829), that the green broccoli is a later introduction that results from a crossing of the white and purple forms. It is curious that while broccoli seems to be quite common in Williamsburg in the 18th century Cobbett writes in 1829 from his experience on Long Island, "Broccoli is not much cultivated in America; and, indeed, scarcely at all." It may be that broccoli does not become a common market crop until later in the 19th century and is found only in kitchen gardens as the Williamsburg references would suggest.

In form the Italian broccoli was a much leggier plant than the modern green broccoli with much smaller florets. The length of the flower stems are sited as a primary difference between cauliflower and broccoli by many authors and the stems are equally important as the florets at the table, generally stripped and served with butter. Randolph concurs, writing, "The stems will eat like Asparagus and the heads like Cauliflowers."

I.     Coleworts, Borecole and Kale

These plants are closest, in form, to the ancestor of all cabbage family plants. Coleworts are recorded by the Greeks as early as 600 BC and are the primary leafy Brassica well into the second millennia AD. Until about the middle of the 18th century, the distinction between colewort, borecole (also spelled boorcole or boor-Cole) and Kale (also spelled Keil, Kele Kail and Cale), seems to be largely semantic. William Turner in The names of herbs in Greke, Latin, Englishe, Duche and Frenche (1548), writes that "Brassica is named...in englishe colewurtes, Cole or keele." Keele or kale being the northern dialect form of Cole Coleworts are an important part of the diet in medieval Europe, forming an important part of the pottage so commonly referred to by early writers. Mundi Cursor, in a Northumbrian poem from about 1300 writes, "He sent him to the yerd...for to geder tham sum cale." Coleworts are listed by Master John Gardener in one of England's first gardening manuscripts, a work in verse titled A Feat of Gardening, circa 1400. One of England's first garden catalogs, Fromond's, Herbys necessary for a gardyn by letter (c. 1500) includes colewort(es) along with a list of many greens suitable for pottage. Distinct varieties of coleworts arise at a very early date. Switzer gives an account of the ancient varieties brassicas in The Practical Kitchen-Gardener (1727) as well as the parentage for several varieties of brassica: “The antient Greeks divided the Brassica into three distinct species; viz. the first, crispa, with curl’d or short leaves, and but few stalks; the second, lea, the leaves growing on long stalks, for which it was call’d cauleda, perhaps our coleworts; and the other, crambe, with smaller leaves but more indented than any of the former, which undoubtedly belongs to the borecole, broccoli, or seakele.” Short and long season coles also seem to be selected at an early date. John De Trevis, in De proprietatibus rerum (1398), writes, "Some coole is Somer coole and some is Wynter Cole"

John Gerard, in the Herball, or Historie of Plants (1597), lists the "Garden Colewort, Curled Colewort, Red Colewort, Open Cabbage Cole, Swollen Colewoort, Parsley Colewoort and Sea Colewoort." By the middle of the 18th century coleworts are generally recognized as a distinct variety that resemble an open cabbage while the borecole or kale are recognized as the curled leaf varieties that look more like the kale we are familiar with today. The Country Farm (1616), which is an English translation of the 16th century French work, Maisons Rustique records: “First of all we are to speake of Coleworts, both because they are most common, and also most aboundant of all other sorts of hearbs.”  Three varieties are listed: “Common coleworts called long or greene Coleworts, Cabbage-coleworts are called white or apple coleworts [and] Red Coleworts.” By the 18th century the common colewort appears to be a fairly distinct type, often listed as Dorsetshire Kale.

Bradley writes in The Compleat Seedsman’s Monthly Calendar (1738): “The Colewort, or wild Cole, never makes an Head or cabbage, but brings large Leaves, that are very sweet when they are boiled.”  Batty Langley records in New Principles of Gardening (1728): “Colly-flowers are of the Cole Race, and their Leaves not unlike the Colewort.”  Cauliflower leaves are round with broad veins that are a distinctly lighter color than the leaves.  Using this distinction the plant would appear very much like the modern collard. 

Philip Miller, in the 1768 edition of The Gardeners Dictionary writes that the "common colewort" is also called "Dorsetshire kale" and the "curled colewort" is called "Siberian borecole or Scotch Kale." The Complete Farmer, by A Society of Gentlemen (1769) also gives Dorsetshire Kale as a synonym for colewot; “Colewort,or Dorsetshire Kale, is a species of cabbage, formerly much cultivated in gardens, but at present little known, cabbage plants being substituted in its room…it is so hardy that no frost will kill it.”

Most authors observe that the common colewort is disappearing by the latter half of the 18th century. Philip Miller writes in the 1754 edition of The Gardeners Dictionary, "The common Colewort is now almost lost near London, where their Markets are usually supplied with Cabbage or Savoy Plants, instead of them." What he is referring to is the common practice, noted by almost all garden writers, of using cabbage plants before they head in place of the true colewort. Randolph, writing in Williamsburg, does list the colewort, saying, "The common COLEWORTS, should be sown the beginning of July and transplanted." By 1806, when McMahon publishes The American Gardener's Calender, he writes, that "Savoy, Battersea and Sugar loaf cabbages are grown for a supply of young greens and when used in that state they are called coleworts, having totally superseded the true colewort, which was formerly cultivated for boiled salads." In 1831, Loudon records in An Encyclopedia of Agriculture, that the true colewort has disappeared. The true colewort, like the modern collard, was likely a coarser green than what cabbages would supply. Coleworts also seem to be more common fair for the poor than the wealthy. Rutter and Carter write in Modern Eden (1767) “The colewort is another of the cabbage kinds, and is hardier than any other. When winters are so severe as to destroy the common cabbages, this stands; and is better for the frost. Some of these should always be raised in a family kitchen-garden; if the weather proves mild, they may be eaten by servants; if hard, they will be very useful to the master.”

Coleworts, borecoles and kales (like the modern collard) were grown as a winter crop and not harvested until after a frost. Mills records in A New System of Practical Husbandry (1767): “Borecole is of three sorts, namely, the common borecole, the green borecole, and the Siberian borecole, which is the curled colewort, by some called Scotch kale…they should not be eaten before the frost has rendered them tender; for till then they are tough and bitter.”

Randolph, writing in Williamsburg, does list the colewort, saying; The commonCOLEWORTS, should be sown the beginning of July and transplanted.  By 1806, when McMahon publishes The American Gardener’s Calender, he writes; that Savoy, Battersea and Sugar loaf cabbages are grown for a supply of young greens and when used in that state they are called coleworts, having totally superseded the true colewort, which was formerly cultivated for boiled salads.  In 1831, Loudon records in An Encyclopedia of Agriculture, that the true colewort has disappeared.

Borecole does not appear as a term for this group until the 18th century and may represent varieties of colewort imported from Holland. Borecole derives from the Dutch boerenkool or "peasant's cabbage.quot; Parkinson writes in Paradisi in Sol (1629) that the English grow the Ordinary colewort while the others, such as curled, are curiosities grown by the Dutch. The first use of the word in English literature comes from John Arbuthnot's Law is a bottomless pit...in the case of...John Bull (1712): "His children live upon salt herring, sowre crud, and borecole." The first reference in English gardening books that I can find comes from Stephen Switzer's Practical Kitchen Gardener (1727), who writes that there are varieties of borecole "both great, and red, and curl'd on the edges." The term borecole often seems to be used for curled or brown (dark purple) varieties of colewort. Gardiner and Hepburn, in The American Gardener (1804), write that in July you should, "Sow Borecole alias brown Cole"

The first recognizable kales come from the northern British Isles and Europe and seem to be used primarily as a garnish, much the way modern plates are garnished with kales that are seldom eaten. Switzer records in 1727 (The Practical Kitchen-Gardener): “The borecole is a hardy coarse plant, and has been cultivated long with us…and is used all the year as a garniture to dishes where greens of the same kind are; the French and Dutch cooks boil it sometimes as they do other coleworts, and often eat it raw with oil and vinegar, and make much ado about it as an extraordinary dish; but our English cooks have not that esteem for it as the others have.”  Eleven years later Bradley gives a similar account in The Compleat Seedsman’s Monthly Calendar (1738)
Curl’d Coleworts, or Curl’d Worts, is a Sort of cole with jagged cut Leaves, strip’d with many Colours; it serves to garnish Dishes, but is never boil’d or eaten, that ever I heard of.” 

By the last quarter of the 18th century Scotch Kale becomes one of the more common kales or borecoles, although it is apparently a larger plant than the one known today. The Gardeners Kalendar from The Encyclopedia of Farming, London (1777) records: “Bore-cole, or, as it is often called Scotch-Kale, is a very useful plant…there are two sorts of it, the brown and the green. The plants run up with very long stems, sometimes three, four, or five feet high.”Scotch Kale is listed by Miller in the The Gardeners Dictionary (1768) and McMahon in American Gardener's Calendar (1806) as equivalent to Siberian Kale. These are two very different kales today. Peter Henderson, in Gardening For Profit (1867) lists a variety of borecole (kale) called Dwarf German Greens or "Sprouts" which he describes as "bluish-green, slightly colored, resembling somewhat the foliage of Ruta Baga Turnips." The Siberian Kale we use today is typified by a bluish-green color and is classed in the Rutabaga (Napus) group of Brassicas. This is probably the same kale that Jefferson writes to Bernard McMahon about in 1812 which he calls Sprout Kale and considers among the most valuable garden plants. J. C. London describes this kale in An Encyclopedia of Gardening (1822) as “German Kale, known in Scotland as German greens, German kale, curled kale and curlies.  Leaves are more pointed and grow much longer, margins not so plaited as Scotch but still with fringed appearance.  Chief difference is in furnishing abundance of side shoots or sprouts for the table.”  Jefferson lists Scotch Kale in 1809 but apparently abandons this variety in favor of the Sprout Kale after 1812. Scotch Kale is in the oleracea group of Brassicas and differs from Siberian Kale in darker lighter green leaves and finer cut leaf margins.

The collard plant we know today is a relatively modern introduction derived from open headed cabbages. The oldest surviving American collard is the Green Glaze, developed from the Green Glaze Cabbage, a very loosely headed cabbage, introduced by Landreth in 1820 (Weaver, Heirloom Vegetable Gardening, 1997). The word collard is a phonetic corruption of col'ort (colewort) and first appears in a British publication titled Connoisseur (1755), "Fed for cheapness with nothing but collart-leaves and chopt straw." The term collard, or similar words for colewort, is occasionally used in the 18th century. In The Journal of Lieut. William Feltman (1781-82) he records on August 17, 1781 in Hanover County, Virginia that: "The negroes here raise great quantities of snaps and collerds. They have no cabbages here." There are many references to coleworts by Virginian diarists, which is an interesting phenomenon at a time when the original colewort seems to be disappearing in England. It is difficult to know exactly what these references refer to. On one hand, any open headed cabbage or cabbage harvested in the immature stage could be called a colewort. However, while this may be the case in diary entries, the advertisements for colewort seeds would seem to refer to the original colewort, long cultivated in England. It is also possible that the colewort in these references refer to a plant that would be called a kale today. In the Jones family papers, however, coleworts are listed separately with Siberian borecole. The latter is clearly a Kale so a distinction seems to be made between the two crops.

In Varlo’s A New System of Husbandry (1785), written in Philadelphia he gives instructions for planting coleworths and boorcoles separately, again indicating a distinction in plant types. As late as 1837 Eliza Person Mitchell records in her diary, in North Carolina, planting collard, coleworts and cabbages. She repeats this planting scheme in 1838, ’39, ’41, ’42 and 1844 (Ed Davis, Emory and Henry College) so she clearly sees a difference between not only cabbages but also collards and coleworts. A painting by Lucas van Valkenborgh titled Vegetable Market from the 16th century shows a cabbage with an open leafy configuration, which may represent a colewort, although it could also be an open headed cabbage.

Landon Carter writes in his diary on August 1, 1764 that he has received from Liverpool "the large field Colewort called Brassica Arvensis, I this day sowed some in my garden to see what they are and to find out their time of sowing, for some I shall also sow early in the spring." This is likely one of the cow cabbages or tree kales that were often used as cattle food in Europe. While they are not really suitable for a kitchen garden, these spectacular plants would be appropriate in a plantation setting.

J.    Turnip Cabbage and Turnip Rooted Cabbage

These plants are among the most ancient of Brassicas.  The Turnip Cabbage, by most authors, is the ancestor of the modern Kohlrabi and the Turnip Rooted Cabbage is a similar plant that seems to have disappeared.  Pliny describes the ancestor of the Turnip Cabbage as a“Brassica in which the stem is thin just above the roots, but swells out in the region that bears the leaves.”  He is likely speaking of a marrow-stem kale which the Turnip Cabbage or kohlrabi is thought to descend from.  The Turnip cabbage is first illustrated by Jörg Ziegler for Fuchs’ Codex (ca. 1563), and is labeled Köl Rúoben.  Rúoben is the archaic form of the modern German Rübe, meaning the vegetable Rape or turnip.  Rüb-Kohl is the Rape Cole or Colerape referred to by early garden writers.

The earliest English differentiation between the Turnip Cabbage and the Turnip Rooted Cabbage comes in Gerard’s Herball (1597), who writes; “The first kind of Rape Cole hath one single long root, garnished with many threddy strings: from which riseth up a great thick stalke, bigger than a great Cucumber or great Turnep: at the top whereof shooteth forth great broad leaves.”This plant he calls the Round rape Cole or Caulorapum rotundum and his illustration looks very much like a primitive Kohlrabi.  The second sort he calls the Long Rape Cole.  “The second hath a long fibrous root like unto the precedent; the tuberous stalke is very great and long, thrusting forth in some few places here and there, small foot stalks; where upon doe grow smooth leaves, slightly indented about the edges.”  This would appear to be a marrow stem kale.  Another illustration of the Round rape Cole from the late 16th century is found in the Clutius Watercolors, a series of illustrations done by an unknown artist(s) for the Dutch pharmacist Theodorus Clutius.  This illustration looks remarkably like the modern Kohlrabi.  Parkinson, in Paradisi in Sol (1629) uses the illustration of the Köl Rúoben from Fuchs Codex in his illustrated guide to the Brassicas as variety number 8.  Curiously, he does not identify it in the key to these illustrations.  In the text he describes the Colerape, writing that it “beareth a white heade, or headed stalke above the ground, as bigge as a reasonable Turnep.” 

Bradley identifies the Cole rape as the Cole Turnep or what became known as the Turnep Cabbage (kohlrabi) in The Compleat Seedsman’s Monthly Calendar (1738): “Cole Rape, or Cole Turnep, is rais’d in some Gardens, and the Turnep-like part boiled and eaten; this Plant has a large Bunch or Knob as big as a large Turnep, just above the ground, and upon that there grow Leaves like Coleworts.”

 

In the 18th and early 19th centuries the classification of Turnep Cabbage and Turnep-rooted Cabbage becomes confused, with different  authors apparently using different names for the same plant.  Philip Miller, in the 1754 edition of the Gardeners Dictionary lists both the Turnep-cabbage (BRASSICA gongylodes) and the turnep-rooted Cabbage (BRASSICA radice napiformi).  He describes only the Turnep Cabbage and says it is spaced in the garden at only 2” apart and; “In winter they will be fit for Use; when they should be cut off, and the stems pulled out of the Ground, and thrown away, as being good for nothing after the heads are cut off.”  Apparently these plants are used only for greens.  In the 1768 edition of The Gardeners Dictionary he describes the “BRASSICA gongylodes as the Cabbage with a taper stalk,” saying it is generally know by the name of Rape or Cole Seed and no longer uses the term Turnep Cabbage for this plant.  BRASSICA radice napiforma he describes as the “Cabbage with a round fleshy stalk,” and calls it the Turnep-rooted Cabbage.   However, Gordon, in his Catalogue of seeds (1771) and Abercrombie, in Every Man his own Gardener (1782), distinguish between the two in that the Turnep-Cabbage produces a turnep above ground while the Turnep-rooted Cabbage produces a turnep below ground.  This would seem to be the reverse of Miller’s names. 

In America Thomas Bridgeman, in the Young Gardener’s Assistant (1850, New York), writes of: “The Brassica Rapa, or Turnip Cabbage, produces its bulb or protuberance, on the stem above ground, immediately under the leaves.  Brassica Napus, or Turnip rooted Cabbage, has an oblong thick root in the form of a winter Radish.”

By 1806, when Bernard McMahon publishes The American Gardener’s Calendar, these plants are classed as Brassica oleracea Napobrassica.  He distinguishes between the two in this way: “The turnip-cabbage produces its bulb or protuberance, which approaches to roundness, on the stem above ground, immediately under the leaves.  The turnip-rooted cabbage has an oblong, thick root, pretty much of the form of the winter radish, but very large.”  He lists the turnip-rooted Cabbage as the variety Napus sativa.  Miller writes that Napus sativa is a variety of the former Turnep Cabbage which he identifies as the Garden Navew and treats it as a turnip.  

The Navew is also known as the French Turnip and classified by Thomas Bridgeman, in the Young Gardener’s Assistant (1850, New York) as “Brassica Napus, variety esculenta…held in great esteem by the French…is called the Navet, or French Turnip”(Miller’s Garden Navew or Napus sativa).  The Navew may be a primitive turnip closed allied to Rape.  The Complete Farmer, by A Society of Gentlemen (1769) gives this description of the Rape plant: “Cole or Rape, the name of a plant greatly cultivated, both on account of its seed, being that from whence the rape-oil is drawn; and also for feeding cattle.  The botanists call it napus sylvestris, or wild navew.” 

The first use of the term Kohl Rabi in England comes from Charles Vancouver’s General view of the agriculture of the county of Devon (1808) in which he describes; “The khol rabi, or above-ground turnip cabbage.”  Fearing Burr, in Field and Garden Vegetables of America (1865), uses Kohl Rabi and Turnip cabbage as synonyms.  The navew and the turnip-rooted cabbage are not listed and the French Turnip is now used as a synonym for the Rutabaga.  In The Vegetable Garden (1885), Kohl-Rabi is listed without the synonym of Turnip Cabbage and the Turnip-rooted Cabbage is used as a synonym for the Swedish Turnip or Ruta-Baga.  Robinson writes that “the varieties of Turnip-rooted Cabbages [Rutabaga] differ from the Kohl-Rabi in that, instead of having the stem swollen over-ground, they produce, partially buried in the soil.”  He also gives the synonyms for the Rutabaga as the French Chou-navet and the German Kohlrübe, further confusing the terminology for the Turnip Cabbage (Kohlrabi) and Rutabaga.  The 1563 Codex illustration of the Köl Rúoben shows a plant with leaf scars throughout the bulb, like a Kohlrabi; the Rutabaga has no leaf scars on the bulb. 

A final bit of confusion, as if more was needed; Miller’s Turnip Cabbage is given the species name gongylodes.  This was not a kohlrabi.  This name disappears and then re-emerges in the 20th century as the species name for kohlrabi. 

We are likely dealing with three different plants in the above descriptions.  The Turnep-rooted Cabbage listed by Gordon, Abercrombie and McMahon is the Long Rape Cole listed by Gerard.  By the 18th century it seems to be used exclusively as cattle feed and there is probably no approximation of it among modern vegetables.  Gordon (1771) gives Reynolds Turnep-rooted Cabbage as a synonym for the Turnip-rooted Cabbage.  Washington plants Reynold’s Turnip-rooted Cabbage in 1788.  Landon Carter lists Reynolds turnep among the many varieties he uses for feeding cattle. 

Miller’s “Turnep Cabbage” is likely a Rape or a marrow stem kale.  It may have been similar to McMahon’s Jerusalem Kale and Burr’s Neapolitan Borecole of which he writes: The swollen portion of the stem is of a fleshy, succulent character, and is used in the manner of Kohl Rabi, between which and the Cabbage it appears to be intermediate.  Its primary use is not for the stem but for the leaves as recounted in Vilmorins, The Vegetable Garden (1885): The Neapolitan Kohl-Rabi with curled leaves is, in fact, of more account as Borecole than as Kohl-Rabi, as the swelling of the stem is often of very small dimensions

The Turnep-rooted Cabbage listed by Miller and the Turnep Cabbage listed by Gordon, Abercrombie, McMahon and others is analogous to the modern Kohlrabi.

While the Turnip-rooted Cabbage seems to be well known in Virginia as cattle food the Turnip Cabbage or Kohlrabi was likely quite uncommon.  Landon Carter plants the “Turnep Cabbage” in his vegetable garden, recording in his diary on Feb. 18, 1770 that it will not stand the winter even though he had it covered in November.  Randolph provides very little help on the subject.  He writes in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), “There’s a TURNEP CABBAGE, which being very strong is fit only for soup.”  This is a direct quote from Miller’s, The Gardeners Dictionary (1754), and the phrasing makes one wonder if he ever tried this vegetable himself.   Mary Randolph, in Virginia Housewife (1824) gives a recipe for the Turnip rooted Cabbage that sounds very much like the preparation that is used for Kohlrabi today; “The cabbage growing at the top is not good; cut the root in slices an inch thick, peel off the rind, and boil the slices in a large quantity of water, till tender; serve it up hot, with melted butter poured over it.”It is just as possible that this is a reference to the Rutabaga. 

The Turnep Cabbage of the 18th century was apparently a coarser, stronger flavored plant than the modern Kohlrabi.  It probably had a limited use as cattle feed.  C.Varlo in A New System of Husbandry, Philadelphia, 1785, writes:  “Cabbage-turnep and turnep-rooted cabbage, American and white Scotch cabbage, and Anjou boorcole, must now be sown, [May] …as they are chiefly intended for cattle.”  In appearance, the modern Kohlrabi is a good approximation of the Turnep Cabbage.                   

K.   Turnip

The turnip is another ancient vegetable. The oil seed form of turnip is mentioned in Sanskrit records in India as long ago as 2000-1500 BC. The modern forms of turnip apparently have two places of origin. The turnip-rape, used for the oil, and later for greens, appear to evolve in Afghanistan and Pakistan while the turnip that is used for its root comes from the eastern Mediterranean. It was probably brought to England from France during the Roman Conquest. Pliny writes of a turnip weighing forty pounds and they seem to be associated with poverty in Rome. In the first century C.E. Pliny described long turnips, flat turnips and round turnips. He wrote of turnips under the names rapa and napus. In Middle English napus became nepe or naep; this term preceded with turn (made round), became the word turnip.

The turnip was likely introduced to England with the Romans; however, the first documented use of the turnip in Europe is not until the 13th century when the turnip-rape is introduced. This was likely a turnip grown for its seed which was used as a lamp oil rather than for the edible root. The predecessor of the modern turnip does not appear until late in the 15th century and remains a very minor crop until the 17th century. One of the earliest references to turnip in England comes in Sir Thomas Elyot's The Castel of Helth (1533), who writes, "Turnepes beinge welle boyled in water, and after with fatte fleshe, noryseth moche." By 1597 Gerard writes in the Herball, "There be sundry sorts of Turneps...some with round roots globe fashion; others ovall or peare fashion; and another sort longish or somewhat like a Radish." The small white is the preferred variety according to Gerard who writes, "The small Turnep is like unto the first described, saving it is lesser. The root is much sweeter in taste, as my selfe hath often proved." Parkinson, in Paradisi in Sol (1629) writes, "there are divers sorts of Turneps, as white, yellow and red," saying the white is most common and of the white varieties the flat variety is preferred over the round.

 The yellow variety is likely the French Turnip or Navet.  The Country Farm (1616), a translation of the 16th century French work, Maisons Rustique, records: “Turneps (called in Latine Rapa) are of two sorts, the round and the long and they differ not much from Napes and Navets, save only in greatnesse and tast: For Turneps are a great deale bigger, and of a more pleasant taste.  Napes and Navets (called of the Latin Napi) are two divers sorts of one kind…differing in taste, colour, and greatness for Napes are greater and drawing toward a yellow colour, lesse pleasing the taste: Navets are lesse, white, and a great deale more savorie.”

The Navet may be an intermediary form of rape or turnip and is called, by the English, Navew (Navewe, Naphew).  Turner writes in the Herball (1557) of the Navet; “I have hearde sume cal it in englishe a turnepe, and other some a naved or navet, it maye be called also longe Rape or navet gentle.”  Turner’s use of longe Rape sounds very much like Gerards Long Rape Cole, however, Gerard describes the Navew or Navet gentle as a separate plant species: “There be sundrie kindes of Nape or Navews, degenerating from the kindes of Turnep.”  The genus for the Navew in the 17th and 18th centuries is Napus.  This is now the species for Rape.  The French navet means turnip, while navette means rape.  

The confusion between Navews and turnips dates to the earliest English garden works.  Thomas Hill writes in The Gardeners Labyrinth (1577); “The property of the ground doth alter the Nauewe into a Turnup, and Turnup into a Nauewe.”  Hill also recognizes the similarity of these plants and the rape: “The Rapes be not much differing from the Navews and Turnups, saving that these be bigger…and in the eating pleasanter then the Navews.”  The confusion lasts well into the 18th century when the Navew is reclassified by Linnaeus from the genus Napus to Brassica.  Miller, in the 1754 edition of The Gardeners Dictionary does not agree with the Linnaeun classification and writes; “This [Turnip Cabbage] hath been lately joined to the Napus Sativa, or Garden Navew, supposing them to be the same species…but as the Garden Navew approaches nearer the Turnep than the Cabbage, so I shall treat them under the title of RAPA.”

It  enjoyed a wide popularity in the 17th century and seems, at least in England, to have fallen out of favor by the end of the 18th century.   In the middle of the 18th century James Justice records in The Scots gardiners director (1759) “Long French Turnip or Navew: the long French Turnip is the best for seasoning Soups or Hodge-podge, for two of these in seasoning will give a higher Flavour than a Dozen of other Turnips, though they are neither fit to be eaten raw or boiled, but are for tasting Soups.”  Mawe records in The Universal Gardener and Botanist (1797): “Long-rooted French Turnep, A long, small, spindle-rooted Turnep, of but little merit except for soups, and should be used while young, other wise it becomes stringy and hard.”  In the next century J.C. Loudon writes in An Encyclopedia of Gardening (1834): “The French, or navet, is of excellent flavor.  It was anciently used throughout the south of Europe, and was more cultivated in this country a century ago than it is now.”  In the United States country Thomas Bridgeman records in The Young gardener’s assistant (1853): “Brassica Napus, var. esculenta, is sometimes cultivated as a salad herb.  It is held in great esteem by the French as a culinary vegetable, and is called the Navet, or French Turnep.”

One of the last English reference to the Navew or Navet that I can find comes in Mrs. Beeton’s Book of Household Management (1861) where she describes “The French Navet…is a variety of the turnip; but instead of being globular, has more the shape of a carrot.”

In the 17th century the turnip becomes an important food for cattle and results in a dramatic change in husbandry. Until this time most cattle were slaughtered in the fall because there was no reliable food source to carry large herds over the winter. The turnip provided winter fodder and allowed cattle to be kept reliably year round. It was not until the early 18th century that turnip culture, as a field crop, was adopted in England to a significant degree. It is the larger, longer and generally yellow turnips that are used for field culture. John Mortimer writes in The Whole Art of Husbandry (1707), "Yellow Turneps...are commonly sown in gardens, but are of very great advantage to be sown in Fields, not only for the use of the Kitchen, but for Food for Cattle in Winter." This culture becomes so important that King George II has a tract prepared on the field culture of turnips for livestock. Miller writes in The Gardeners Dictionary (1754), "They [turnips] are sown in great Plenty in the Fields near London; not only for the Use of the Kitchen, but for Food for Cattle in Winter, when other Food fails; and this Way is become a great Improvement to barren sandy Lands, particularly in Norfolk, where, by the Culture of Turneps, many Persons have doubled the yearly Value of the Ground." Because turnips grow well on sandy, infertile soils, such as those found in Norfolk, England, this area was responsible for the development of several varieties of large cattle feeding turnips that retain the name of Norfolk turnips well into the next century. The field culture of turnips is still fairly recent in England in the 18th century, or as Miller writes, "It is not many Years since the Practice of sowing turneps, for feeding of Cattle, has been of general Use: how it happed'd that this Improvement should have been so long neglected in every Part of Europe, is not easy to determine...yet this Plant was not much cultivated in the Fields till of late Years; nor is the true Method of cultivating Turneps yet know, or, at least, not practis'd in some of the distant Counties of England, at this time."

Of the turnips used for the table, the small white and the purple top are much preferred. Miller writes in The Gardeners Dictionary (1754): "the first [round white] and third [round purple] Sorts here mention'd, which are chiefly cultivated for the Table in England. The yellow Sort, and that with long Roots, were formerly more cultivated than at present; for it is now very rare to see either of these brought to the Markets." Most turnips are sown for a winter crop, the Dutch turnip is the primary summer crop, sown in the spring.

The most popular winter turnip is the purple. The round red turnip listed by Wilson is a large winter turnip that, according to Philip Miller in the 1768 edition of The Gardeners Dictionary, is being replaced by the Green turnip. The Hanover turnip is probably the result of the study sponsored by King George II and thereby bear the Hanover name. It is a tankard type (long turnip) used for cattle food. Most of the other turnips listed, especially the Norfolk, Large English,and Large Field are field turnips intended for cattle.

Randolph, in A Treatise on Gardening (1793), writes, "The white and purple rooted Turnep, are the two sorts chiefly cultivated in England for the table." This is likely the case in the colonies as well. The White Egg Turnip is probably the best approximation of a short season white turnip of the 18th century. Winter turnips are best represented by the Purple Top White Globe and the Gillfeather, which is probably similar to the Green turnip.

The Rutabaga or Swedish Turnip is a result of a cross between the turnip and the cabbage that may have occurred in Europe as early as the Middle Ages. If differs from the turnip in having smooth foliage rather than the somewhat bristly foliage of the turnip and is generally a yellow fleshed root while the turnip is generally a white fleshed root. The Rutabaga or Swedish Turnip is first described by the Swiss botanist, Casper Bauhin in 1620. It does not appear in England until the last quarter of the 18th century, probably introduced between 1775 and 1780.

It appears to be unknown in the American colonies until very late in the 18th century. Peter Kalm, during his travels in America, records on March 27, 1749: “Nobody around here had ever heard of rutabagas or Swedish turnips.”

Thomas Jefferson is one of the first Americans to grow the Rutabaga. In a June 8, 1795 letter to John Taylor he writes: “I enclose you a few seeds of the Rutabaga, or Swedish winter turnep. This is the plant which the English Government thought of value enough to be procured at public expense from Sweden, cultivated and dispersed. A Mr. Strickland, an English gentleman from Yorkshire, lately here, left a few seeds with me, of which I impart to you. He tells me it has such advantage over the common turnep that it is spreading rapidly over England & will become their chief turnep.”

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