Dictionary Definition
cabbage
Noun
1 any of various types of cabbage [syn: chou]
2 informal terms for money [syn: boodle, bread, clams, dinero, dough, gelt, kale, lettuce, lolly, lucre, loot, moolah, pelf, scratch, shekels, simoleons, sugar, wampum]
3 any of various cultivars of the genus Brassica
oleracea grown for their edible leaves or flowers [syn: cultivated
cabbage, Brassica
oleracea] v : make off with belongings of others [syn: pilfer, purloin, pinch, abstract, snarf, swipe, hook, sneak, filch, nobble, lift]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Noun
- An edible plant (Brassica oleracea var. capitata) having a head of green leaves.
- The leaves of this
plant eaten as a vegetable.
- Cabbage is good for you.
- A person with severely reduced mental capacities due to
brain
damage.
- After the car crash, he became a cabbage.
- uncountable slang Cloth or clippings cabbaged or purloined by one who cuts out garments.
- uncountable slang Money
Synonyms
- (plant) cabbage plant, cole
- (leaves of this plant eaten as a vegetable): cole, greens
- (person with severely reduced mental capacities due to brain damage): vegetable
Translations
plant
- Catalan: col
- Chinese:
- Croatian: kupus , zelje
- Czech: zelí
- Dutch: kool
- Estonian: kapsas
- Finnish: kaali
- French: chou
- Greek: λάχανο
- Greek, Ancient: κράμβη (krambe)
- Hebrew: כְּרוּב (kruv)
- Hungarian: káposzta
- Italian: cavolo
- Japanese: キャベツ
- Korean: 양배추
- Latvian: kāposts m s
- Macedonian: зелка
- Maltese: kaboċċa
- Occitan: caulet
- Portuguese: repolho
- Russian: капуста
- Sardinian: càule
- Scottish Gaelic: càl
- Slovak: kapusta
- Thai: (gà-làm bplee)
- Welsh: bresych(en)
leaves of this plant eaten as a vegetable
- Croatian: kupus , zelje
- Czech: zelí
- Dutch: kool
- Estonian: kapsas
- Finnish: kaali
- French: chou
- German: Kohl
- Hebrew: כְּרוּב (kruv)
- Italian: cavolo
- Japanese: キャベツ
- Maltese: werqa tal-kaboċċa
- Portuguese: repolho
- Russian: капуста
- Sardinian: càule
- Scottish Gaelic: càl
- Slovak: kapusta
- Spanish: col
- Thai: (bai gà-làm)
- Welsh: bresych(en)
person with severely reduced mental capacities
due to brain damage
- Dutch: plant
- Finnish: vihannes
- Portuguese: vegetal
- Thai: (bpen pàk)
money
- Russian: капуста
- Spanish: pasta
Verb
- To form a head like that the cabbage; as, to make lettuce cabbage.
- To purloin or embezzle, as the pieces of cloth remaining after cutting out a garment; to pilfer.
See also
Extensive Definition
The cabbage (Brassica
oleracea Capitata Group), is a plant of the Family Brassicaceae
(or Cruciferae). It is a herbaceous, biennial,
and dicotyledonous
flowering
plant with leaves forming a characteristic compact cluster.
Cabbages grown late in autumn and in the beginning of winter are
called coleworts.
The cabbage is derived from a leafy wild
mustard plant, native to the Mediterranean
region. It was known to the ancient Greeks and
Romans;
Cato
the Elder praised this vegetable for its medicinal properties,
declaring that "it is first of all the vegetables".. The English
name derives from the Normanno-Picard
caboche ("head"). Cabbage was developed by ongoing artificial
selection for suppression of the internode length. The dense core
of the cabbage is called the babchka. It is related to the turnip.
The sharp or bitter taste sometimes present in
cabbage is due to glucosinolate(s).
Uses
The only part of the plant that is normally eaten is the leafy head; more precisely, the spherical cluster of immature leaves, excluding the partially unfolded outer leaves. The so-called 'cabbage head' is widely consumed raw, cooked, or preserved in a great variety of dishes. Cabbage is a leaf vegetable.Raw
Raw cabbage is usually sliced into thin strips or shredded for use in salads, such as coleslaw. It can also replace iceberg lettuce in sandwiches. Cabbage is an excellent source of Vitamin C.Cooked
Cabbage is often added to soups or stews. Cabbage soup is popular in central Europe and eastern Europe, and cabbage is an ingredient in some kinds of borscht. Cabbage is also used in many popular dishes in India. Boiling tenderizes the leaves and releases sugars, which leads to the characteristic "cabbage" aroma. Boiled cabbage has become stigmatized in North America because of its strong cooking odor and the belief that it causes flatulence. Boiled cabbage as an accompaniment to meats and other dishes can be an opportune source of vitamins and dietary fiber. Stuffed cabbage is an East European and Middle Eastern delicacy. The leaves are softened by parboiling or placing the whole head of cabbage in the freezer, and then filled with chopped meat and/or rice.Fermented and preserved
Cabbage is the basis for the German sauerkraut and Korean kimchi. To pickle cabbage it is placed in a jar, covered with water and salt, and left in a warm place for several days to ferment. Sauerkraut was historically prepared at home in large batches, as a way of storing food for the winter. Cabbage can also be pickled in vinegar with various spices, alone or in combination with other vegetables. Korean baechu kimchi is usually sliced thicker than its European counterpart, and the addition of onions, chilies, minced garlic and gingers is common.Medicinal properties
In European folk medicine, cabbage leaves are used to treat acute inflammation. A paste of raw cabbage may be placed in a cabbage leaf and wrapped around the affected area to reduce discomfort. Some claim it is effective in relieving painfully engorged breasts in breastfeeding women.Cabbage contains significant amounts of
glutamine, an amino acid,
which has anti-inflammatory properties.
It is a source of indol-3-carbinol, or I3C, a
compound used as an adjuvent therapy for recurrent
respiratory papillomatosis, a disease of the head and neck
caused by human papillomavirus (usually types 6 and 11) that causes
growths in the airway that can lead to death.
Varieties
There are many varieties of cabbage based on shape and time of maturity. Traditional varieties include "Late Flat Dutch", "Early Jersey Wakefield" (a conical variety), "Danish Ballhead" (late, round -headed). Savoy Cabbage has a round head with crinkled leaves. Red cabbage is a small, round headed type with dark red leaves. Krautman is the most common variety for commercial production of sauerkrauts.Cultivation
Broadly speaking, cabbage varieties come in two groups, early and late. The early varieties mature in about 45 days. They produce small heads which do not keep well and are intended for consumption while fresh. The late cabbage matures in about 87 days, and produces a larger head.Cabbage can be started indoors or sowed directly.
Like all brassicae, cabbage is a cool season crop, so early and
late plantings do better than those maturing in the heat of the
summer.
Control of insect pests is important,
particularly in commercial production where appearance is a
driver
of success. The pesticides sevin and malathion are both listed for
use on cabbage. The caterpillars of some
butterflies in the
family Pieridae (the
"whites") feed on brassicas and can be serious pests; see also
List of Lepidoptera that feed on Brassica.
Cabbages keep well and were thus a common winter
vegetable before refrigeration and
long-distance shipping of produce.
Related Brassica oleracea varieties
Besides cabbage proper, the species Brassica oleracea has many distinctive cultivars, which are commonly known by other names: broccoli (Italica Group), cauliflower (Botrytis Group), kale, collard greens, and spring greens (Acephala Group), kohlrabi (Gongylodes Group), brussels sprouts (Gemmifera Group), Chinese kale or Chinese broccoli (Alboglabra Group), broccolini (Italica × Alboglabra Group), and broccoflower (Italica × Botrytis Group).Linguistic associations
During World War II, "kraut" (cabbage) was a racial slur for Germans. In Hebrew, the term "rosh kruv" (cabbage head) implies stupidity.In England in the late 1950s, French language
teachers taught from a textbook the phrase "ma petite chou" -- my
little cabbage -- as an endearment from a man to a woman. This is
still used today as can be seen at:
“See there ma petite chou, now everything is
worked out.” Patricia turned and walked back to the desk. “Gérard,
why must you call me ma petite chou all the time?” “Ma chérie, it
is an endearment. If you understood that in French…” She cut him
off mid sentence. “I know what it means Gérard. Even with my
limited French vocabulary I know that it means my small cabbage.”
“But that is not the endearment. You do not understand…”
In England, cabbage is a slang synonym for
"cash", especially paper money.
References
See also
- Chinese cabbage resembles cabbage, but is derived from a different species Brassica campestris
- Kerguelen cabbage is the distantly related Pringlea antiscorbutica''
- Cabbage soup diet
- Cabbage Patch Kids
External links
cabbage in Arabic: ملفوف
cabbage in Min Nan: Ko-lê-chhài
cabbage in Czech: Hlávkové zelí
cabbage in Welsh: Bresychen
cabbage in Danish: Hvidkål
cabbage in German: Weißkohl
cabbage in Modern Greek (1453-): Λάχανο
cabbage in Spanish: Repollo
cabbage in Korean: 양배추
cabbage in Hindi: बंद गोभी
cabbage in Indonesian: Kubis
cabbage in Hebrew: כרוב
cabbage in Malay (macrolanguage): Kubis
Bulat
cabbage in Dutch: Wittekool
cabbage in Japanese: キャベツ
cabbage in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kvitkål
cabbage in Narom: Caboche
cabbage in Polish: Kapusta głowiasta
cabbage in Portuguese: Repolho
cabbage in Serbian: Купус
cabbage in Swedish: Vitkål
cabbage in Thai: กะหล่ำปลี
cabbage in Tonga (Tonga Islands): Kāpisi
cabbage in Turkish: Lahana
cabbage in Yiddish: קרויט
cabbage in Chinese: 捲心菜
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Irish potato, Kraut, aubergine, beans, blunt, boodle, brass, bread, bucks, chips, dinero, dough, eggplant, gelt, gilt, grease, green, green stuff, greens, jack, kale, legumes, love apple, mad apple,
mazuma, moolah, mopus, oil of palms, ointment, oof, ooftish, pieplant, potato, potherbs, produce, rhino, rhubarb, rocks, shekels, simoleons, spondulics, spud, sugar, tater, the needful, tin, tomato, vegetables, wampum, white
potato