Here is a great idea for fall gardens! Kohlrabi is awesome!
This year has started off with a whole mess load of stress. We have had to gratefully step through doors (so that we could close them) while trying to remain open to new adventures. It’s been rough, but gratitude is an incredibly stabilizing force during loss and chaos. The one thing that has stayed constant is: my garden. Although most of the country is in a deep freeze, down here in Texas my garden is chugging along. This is a preview for the rest of the country’s spring, or you can try this a little later in fall. I advise everyone to take the plunge and try growing kohlrabi this year!

Trying to grow cool weather crops this far south means planting in fall and harvesting mid winter. I recently pulled some Kohlrabi, turnips and carrots.
I jump for joy when the kohlrabi is ready. It’s my very favorite vegetable (and it’s my mom’s favorite, too!) Kohlrabi may look funny but it is a tasty brassica. Brassicas are a big family and include: broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, cabbages, mustard, turnips, kohlrabi, kale, rutabaga, horseradish and many more. You will often hear them grouped together as cruciferous vegetables or cole crops. In the below recipe you can substitute rutabaga or turnips or use a mix. Use whatever you can find at the grocer or what you have growing, although I think the kohlrabi is the tastiest in this.

Brassicas have great health benefits including antimicrobial effects, anticancer compounds and they may help your liver clean up toxins.

Kohlrabi looks like a root vegetable but is actually a swollen piece of the stem. Do not plant them too close together as this will make them long and leggy and they will become woody. Also, do not try and grow these in the heat of summer: there is no removing the bitterness a brassica will develop in the heat. Cool weather will produce a sweet, round, “root like” vegetable with a taste somewhere between broccoli stems and rutabagas (rutabagas are a wonderful root vegetable. I find them at the grocer occasionally. They are also easy to grow. Once cooked: rutabagas remind me of a potato but with better flavor.)

A lot of people enjoy kohlrabi raw. They have a slight bite when raw, like a very (very) mild radish or a turnip. I am one of the people that can’t eat raw brassicas because of thyroid disease, so I am very lucky that kohlrabi (like most cole crops) tastes delicious cooked with ham or bacon. I think kohlrabi was born for the recipe below and the result is a truly enjoyable comfort food!
The entire plant is edible. The rest of the stem tastes a little earthy to me. The leaves are very thick and can be cooked like kale or collard greens. Save the leaves and stems for another recipe.
The real hero of this plant is the swollen stem. Once they are cooked they become slightly sweet and wonderfully savory. They are incredibly delicious and once you’ve tried them you will, forever after, be sure to add plenty of space for them in the spring/fall garden.



People in the know: impatiently wait for their kohlrabi to mature and do a special kohlrabi “happy dance” when they are ready to pick! Trust me. I’m not the only one head over heals in love with this vegetable: it really is that good!
Kohlrabi Ham Bake:
Ingredients:
3 Tbs Butter or Bacon Grease
4 Kohlrabi, Peeled and Diced (Or any mix of: turnip, rutabaga and/or kohlrabi)
8 oz. Ham Steak, Diced
Fist Sized Amount of Fresh Chopped Parsley (flat leaf parsley cooks up better than curly leaf does)
4 Egg Yolks
1 Cup Heavy Cream, Table Cream or 1/2 and 1/2
3 Tbs All Purpose Flour (you can sub almond flour if you are avoiding wheat or carbs.)
1 tsp Mace (No, this isn’t the stuff you spray on attackers! You’ll find it in the spice isle.)
1/8 tsp (+/- To Your Liking) Each Of Salt and Freshly Ground Pepper
Directions:
1. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F. In a large skillet, melt the butter or bacon grease on medium heat. Add the diced kohlrabi and gently cook for 8 to 10 minutes, stirring occasionally.
2. Beat the egg yolks and whisk in the heavy cream, flour, mace, salt and pepper until well combined.
3. Place half of the cooked kohlrabi in a greased, large oven-proof casserole dish. Layer the ham and parsley and top with the rest of the kohlrabi. Pour sauce over the mixture. The thicker you layer this: the longer it is going to take to bake. I keep mine fairly thin and wait until the center is bubbling to call it done. If you make this really thick: the outside will be done long before the inside. So, try to keep it thin. If yours is starting to set on the outside and the center is not done, go ahead and stir it. It won’t taste any different than if you have neat layers and you will get a better end product if it is all finished cooking at the same time.
4. Bake for 35-45 minutes or until the center is bubbling and no longer runny. Serve immediately. You can add grated cheese to the top if you like, but I prefer the recipe as is.
Serves 4.
Once you try this, you will be a convert to this weird looking vegetable. It’s truly a shame that more people don’t have access to this veggie. The seeds are easy to sprout and will come up in your spring (or fall) garden with the beets and peas…but once you’ve had kohlrabi: those other spring vegetables won’t matter. Spring and fall will start to mean “Kohlrabi season”. On top of your personal enjoyment: you can surprise and convert your friends into kohlrabi lovers when you serve this underused garden star. Then show them the crazy looking raw stem: It’s guaranteed to “wow” the uninitiated!
Looks pretty nice and healthy!
This looks delicious!!
Nice
This kohrabi seems to be popular all of a sudden. Has it always been popular? I have not seen so much of it since the late 1980s.
It’s a favorite for my mother who grew up in Kansas. I’ve grown it a long time, but I do think it is getting more attention. I think there’s a lot of people who are trying more exotic vegetables and fruit and this is mild and enjoyable.
I have never grown it, and have not even cooked it since the late 1980s, when it grew on campus where I was in school.