Early Cabbage Types
These cabbages grow quickly and mature quickly, so they must be harvested
quickly. These are the standard sort of cabbage grown.
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- Jingan
- 55 days from planting to harvest. From the Far East comes this exceptional
early green cabbage.
Two pounds in size,
this mild, small-cored variety has enough variability to offer the home gardener
a longer window of harvest. Top notch quality for slaw or kraut.
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Derby Day (Golden Acre)
- 58 days from planting to harvest. Dark-green heads have attractive
pale hearts. The flavor, especially of the heart, is extremely sweet and tender.
The uniform, round light
green heads run 3 - 5 pounds and about 5 - 7 inches in diameter depending on
spacing. English seed.
- Charmant
- 66 days from planting to harvest. Medium green with yellowish-white interior. Forms dense heads of 3 -
4 pounds. Stands for weeks without splitting and is suited to close spacings.
Matures its head one to two weeks after Derby Day and eight to nine weeks before
Danish Ballhead. Eating quality is excellent, with a full rich flavor.
- Ruby Ball
- 88 days from planting to harvest. Ruby Ball is clearly the best early Red Cabbage. The attractive firm
red heads have a mild sweet flavor, and weigh in at 3 - 4 pounds. Ruby
Ball also holds in the field a long time, for extended fresh harvests. Japanese
seed.
- Julius
- 90 days from planting to harvest.
Very attractive, blue-green color
with a fine, highly-savoyed head. The firm, well-packed cabbage heads average 3 -
5 pounds and will hold for weeks without bursting. Sweet and mild-flavored.
Autumn Cabbage Types
For Late Cabbage Salad Succession Slaw or
salad is the primary purpose of most gardeners' cabbage patches. And the finest
cabbage salads of all are made from the savoy types; very thin-leaved, very
tender, very mild and tasty.
However, these thin, tender, succulent leaves
are not very cold hardy, so for very late maturity in maritime climates, the
Europeans developed extra hardy types (January King and Wivoy) with thicker,
tougher leaves. Extra-vigorous, hybrid savoys are the easiest-to-grow type of
cabbage.
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- Red Rodan
- 140 days from planting to harvest. Large-framed, round, red cabbages
average 8 - 10 inches in diameter. Very hard 2 3/4 pound heads are
surprisingly tender for a variety that often can stand until March without
rotting. Vigorous plants make Red Rodan one of the easier types of cabbage to
grow. Danish seed.
- Danish Ballhead
- 125 days from planting to harvest. 7 - 10 inch diameter, 3 1/2 pound,
well-protected, light green heads have good field-holding ability into the
Winter. Mild and tender, Danish Ballhead is a general-purpose cabbage for kraut,
slaw or cooking. Danish seed.
- Gloria
- 86
days from planting to harvest. Medium large 8 - 10 pound, blue-green heads with a very white,
crispy, tightly packed interior. This Summer-planted cabbage is perfect for
sauerkraut. Small-cored
and resistant to black rot.
- Bently
- 145 days from planting to harvest. A medium-sized 4 1/2 pound,
white cabbage with exceptional holding ability makes for extended harvest
time. Bently is a sweet, mild cabbage with a good head wrap and moderate-sized
core. In past Winter trials, Bently withstood a week of 19 degree weather with no
ill effects. Harvest January-March. Highly recommended as a cabbage for very
long storage. Dutch seed.
- Rougette
- 150 days from planting to harvest.
An exceptional red cabbage variety from France. The 2-1/2 pound heads are uniform
throughout with a firm wrap and medium core. Rougette's most distinctive
characteristic is its leaf and head color--a beautiful burgundy red with a
striking velvet glow. Its appearance, along with its clean yet robust
flavor, will surely be a favorite for gardener's fresh use or storage.
- January King
- 160
- 210 days from planting to harvest. This French heirloom is a most dependable Winter cabbage variety.
Flattened green heads with purplish markings on the veins and slightly savoyed
outer leaves. The heads are between 3 - 5 pounds and quite compact. Very cold
hardy with the ability to stand in the field until March. Best planted early in
July. English seed.
- Savonarch
- 77
days from planting to harvest. Vigorously
growing, beautiful plants produce uniformly large 8 1/2 inch, light
green, flat-topped, white-cored, medium-dense heads that make the
finest-tasting cabbage salads. Long field-holding ability.
- Wivoy
- 160 days from planting to harvest. Highly savoyed, medium-green,
vigorously-growing large plants develop a crinkly 3-pound head very late in Fall
and don't get hard until January. The heads are fairly tender and have a mild
flavor, resisting rain, frost and freezes until the end of March. This variety
has withstood freezing down to 7 degrees and showed no damage after being frozen
solid for weeks.
Overwinter Cabbage Types
(August sown) In England, spring cabbages are
called a gambler's crop, and the varieties available from their seed houses are
numerous--but most of them fail to work.
Sowing must be timed
so that they make some growth before Winter cold and low light levels check their
growth . . . enough that they'll head out well in spring, but not so much that
they bolt before heading out!
Culture
Spring cabbages need
well-limed and well-manured soil at planting time. Sow the seeds outdoors late in
August and before mid-September; or mid-October if growing them under coldframes
to transplant out early in spring when they're 6 - 8 inches tall. If this is your
first attempt at spring cabbage, try several sowings 10 days apart. Doing this
will give you a feel for the plant. The plants should be spaced out about 18
inches in all directions. In late February, side dress the plants with bloodmeal
(one teaspoonful per plant) and again late March so that large heads are
obtained.
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- Springtime
- 230 days from planting to harvest. A hardy bolt-resistant ballhead type.
This introduction was developed for the earliest possible spring yields from an
early to mid-September sowing. The eating quality compares with the Golden Acre
types. The uniform 3 pound heads are quite solid and will hold for two weeks at
maturity. Seed from England.
- First Early Market
- 240 days from planting to harvest. Developed by the English
equivalent of the USDA for extreme reliability under a broad range of conditions.
First Early Market 218 is cold-hardy to below 10 degrees.
The heads are small, 1 - 1 1/2 pounds, pointed
and rather loose, and offer a pleasant improvement in the quality of garden
greens during early May when they head up. The seed is from England.
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