Could someone point me to source that clearly defines the difference between calabrese and Broccoli?
I thought that Calabrese was a particular type of broccoli with large green heads, which presumably originated in Calabria. I have some Italian seeds which is called Calabrese but which actually produces quite small green heads but lots of them.
Wkipedia has quite a good description.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broccoli
I have also found a reference to Calabrese being green while sprouting broccoli is purple or white but having found it once I cant find it again.
What we normally call broccoli (tight headed) is actually calabrese while the loose headed forms like PSB are broccoli.
Calabrese & Broccoli are actually a form of Cauliflower and as such are treated in a similar way.
Calabrese is a mild flavoured green sprouting broccoli.
The hybrid varieties produce large green heads, and after harvesting produce a second crop of smaller spears reminiscent of traditional 'sprouting broccoli'
thanks you for you answers but alas you still have not answered my question by providing a source for info you provided. You all seem to contradict each other the answers of other I can not take answer as fact with a more reliable source to back up the info.
Welcome to the forum katisue (that sounds like a sneeze!). There's no need to post the same question in more than one folder. It will get picked up. This is a very friendly helpful forum. I hope you find it so and that you're able to help and receive help as required. Tell us a bit about your growing?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broccoli#Varieties (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broccoli#Varieties)
Quote from: katisue on August 02, 2010, 16:07:44
thanks you for you answers but alas you still have not answered my question by providing a source for info you provided.
Try these sources;
http://www.allotment.org.uk/vegetable/calabrese/index.php (http://www.allotment.org.uk/vegetable/calabrese/index.php)
http://www.thegardenersalmanac.co.uk/Data/Calabrese/Calabrese.htm (http://www.thegardenersalmanac.co.uk/Data/Calabrese/Calabrese.htm)
I hope these sources give the explanation you want!
Tee Gee sorry but sources are too shallow.
Admin here, unfortunately katisue has been banned for multiple user accounts.
Pass!
I get the feeling that katisue is a previous poster here under various guises!
No points for guessing who it is folks! :)
Katiesue if I'm wrong then how about responding to Ceres comments, also tell us whereabouts you reside and why you want such detailed sources.
Quote from: katisue on August 02, 2010, 16:07:44
thanks you for you answers but alas you still have not answered my question by providing a source for info you provided. You all seem to contradict each other the answers of other I can not take answer as fact with a more reliable source to back up the info.
Katisue, I have read the answers and do not find them contradictory at all. Calabrese is a type of broccoli (it is what you buy in the supermarket as broccoli) which produces a large central head and, when that is cut, lots of smaller "heads". If you keep cutting them before they flower (the bit we eat is immature flowers) they keep producing.
Broccoli proper (or sprouting broccoli) does not produce a large central head and is not green. It is purple or white and tends to be a larger and more sprawling plant.
Why do you need sources? have a look at the seed packets in any garden centre. You will find purple sprouting and white sprouting broccoli early and late and then packets of the green stuff which are randomly called broccoli or calabrese. The Americans call them all broccoli, I believe, which is probably part of the confusion.
They are all members of the cabbage family and particularly closely related to the cauliflower.
None of this really matters for growing them. If you are doing a doctoral thesis I suggest you do an academic search?
Quotebut sources are too shallow.
The Wiki pages have a list of reference books on the subject of broccoli. I suggest that you need to hove down to your local library and see if you can get hold of some of them.
QuoteNone of this really matters for growing
We are more into actually growing the things and for that there is a lot of contradictory advice. It depends on where you live, what your soil is like etc etc.
We are not very academic here but there is a huge number of years of vegetable growing expertise around on here.
Why do we get users trying to be rude on this forum, posting under silly names, and making undesirable comments? It's a GARDENING Forum for god's sake, what possible thrill can they get out of annoying us and wasting our time? Go post on a newspaper comments page if you think you have something intellectually relevant to say!
Still, at least some of us can appreciate the comedy value of a daily "hunt the d***head" game...
Fell right into that one this time :P!
That time of the year again!!!
School's out ::) ;D
That second post of hers was obvious trolling.
I think Manics is right. 'She' is a bit bored.
It is sad that when the world is so full of interesting opportunities that some people can think of nothing better to do than get enjoyment from being disruptive.
Despite the name I think that it was plainleaf ( TGG, etc.). He/she (?) has also used Lacysue on another gardening forum!
katisue asked the self same question yesterday on that forum and was later quote...banned for being a repeat offending prat! Oh, and a previously banned registration.
Wonder why my answer vanished XX Jeannine
Could someone fill me in on what this fight is about?
Least said soonest mended ;).
I think that Shakespeare summed it up in Romeo and Juliet when he said that a Rose by any other name would smell as sweet.