A curious reader wants to know if you can eat flowering kale? Yes. That was easy. Flowering kale differs from regular kale in having short internodes so the leaves make a dense rosette of leaves. It also forms pigments, or not, often in the leaves in the center of the rosette, so the overall effect is that of a flower, sort of. Nonetheless, just like garden kale, flowering kale is quite resistant to cool weather and frosts providing garden color and design when most things are going dormant for the winter. In fact kale is actually better tasting after exposure to some cold temperatures. You can eat flowering kale just like regular kale. One of the best ways to use kale is in soups; here's one example, a Portuguese kale soup. HT to Jardin botanique de Montréal for making this picture available via the Wikimedia Creative Commons.
RFK Jr. is not a serious person. Don't take him seriously.
2 weeks ago in Genomics, Medicine, and Pseudoscience
6 comments:
A while ago, I posted a photo of this plant on my blog and asked people what this was and whether it was eatable. It's good finally to have an answer and a recipe. :-)
Sorry that I missed it. My bad.
Flowering kale is not only edible but yummy! It used to be available in grocery stores around here, and I would eat it in salads. It tastes like a combination of cabbage and kale. The white variety tastes like green cabbage and the purple variety tastes like red cabbage.
Unfortunately I haven't seen it in the stores for years, and I don't have the space to grow it. :(
Sobeys in Canada has both
Don't know if bearded dragons want 2 (to) eat flowering kale, but if they did, they could.
Mmmmm I don't know.
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