CABBAGE MAGIC
Planting multiple heads in the garden.
by D.J. Young
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Knowing a few little "tricks of the trade" can make
gardening-which is always a satisfying
experience—a total joy. Occasionally, these
timesaving, moneysaving, or just plain energy-con serving
tips can be found in horticulture books and magazines, but
more often they're passed along by oldtimers who've been
digging in the good earth for decades. It was such a man as
this who taught me the "cabbage magic" trick.
"You can grow more than one head of cabbage per plant, you
know," he remarked one day. I didn't really
believe him (who would?), but I tried his method
anyway ... and it worked! Anyone can do it, and the
technique should be especially helpful if your growing
season is too short for producing two crops (in spring and
fall).
LEAVE A LITTLE TO GROW ON
The procedure is easy: When you harvest the main cabbage
head (probably at about this time of year), just leave
enough bottom leaves to constitute a viable plant (see the
photograph). If you cut below the lowest leaves,
the stubble will wither quickly and die ... and you want it
to live long enough to be the sprouting surface for a
second crop. Now, make believe what's left is a whole new
plant. Treat it like one, cultivating it, watering it, and
even working some rich manure into the first inch of soil
(being careful not to injure the roots).
Before long, you'll see some small sprouts forming around
the rim of the main head's stub. Keep on treating the plant
like a new one, and in time these little "sub-heads" will
grow to the size of a fist. There will probably be several
of the shoots-perhaps as many as six-and, in total, they'll
provide almost as much food value as the big main head did
... but with a delightful difference. The cores of these
little cabbages will be pale green—almost
white-leafy, and tender. The outer leaves will be darker
green, but still tender and tasty. They're all, in
fact, simply delicious!
The small size and fine quality of the minicoles make them
especially suitable for Chinese stir-fry, delicate
steaming, or soups and stews. (Since you'll be harvesting
them in the late fall when the first chill winds are
blowing, the savory leaves are particularly appropriate for
soup.)
This bit of cabbage magic isn't difficult to perform ...
but it can increase your Brassica yield
dramatically, and that should make it a very
worthy addition to your private collection of garden
know-hows!