Kohlrabi
Proserpina Offline
South Yorkshire
#1
Does anyone have much experience of kohlrabi growing, especially late sowing for a late Autumn/Winter harvest? Realseeds seem to suggest that this is possible, and I'm wondering whether they might be something I could grow on a window sill from a June sowing until October, and then plant out when (if!) I have a garden? Or will they be enormous by then, or hate being transplanted?
Formerly self-contained, but expanding my gardening horizons beyond pots!
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mcdood Offline
Member
#2
They are usually ready to harvest in 3 to 4 months and grow to about the size of a smallish cabbage so I don't think it would work very well for you tbh. Most crops for winter/early spring harvest will do most of their growing over the period you mention of June to October and then just tick over over winter and with some another short growth spurt in Spring so not sure what to suggest as suitable for you, hopefully someone else will have a bright idea.
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Vinny Offline
Geordie living 'ower the watter'
#3
Just sown 30 seeds in modules this morning. I grew them many years ago but this variety is supposed to be a giant variety whereas the green/purple ones I grew in the past only made tennis ball size.
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toomanytommytoes Offline
Member
#4
I don't think they would last well on a windowsill until October. They don't mind being transplanted but it's probably best to do when they're relatively young. Like mcdood says, they won't do much after October. They get a foot or more tall so you'd need a pot of decent volume.

For planting in October you're likely to do better with things like spinach, pak choi, radish, winter radish, mustard greens, baby leaf kale, winter lettuce, spring onions and rocket. Sown in August/early September they can go into a greenhouse or under cover outdoors in October and crop well over winter. Lambs lettuce and miner's lettuce can stay outside without cover. Frost hardy cabbages like Winterjewel and Spring Hero can stay outside all winter for cropping in April/May. Cabbages, cauliflower and perhaps calabrese can all overwinter in pots in a greenhouse to be planted out in early spring.
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Can the Man Offline
Can the Man with the van
#5
I’ve never even eaten kohlrabi, what does it taste of, and how would you normally cook it ?
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mcdood Offline
Member
#6
Tastes to me quite similar to a turnip. I eat it raw in salads either grated or sliced but I suppose you could boil or roast too.
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Small chilli Online
Super Pest Controller
#7
Here you go Can.
This make me want to try eating it again.

https://www.thekitchn.com/5-tasty-ways-t...rabi-60321

I was given a kohlrabi many years ago and told to treat it like a carrot. I really don’t like it and have never tried again. So never grown it either. Think I’ll give it a go if I ever get my hands on seeds & my own garden to plant them in.
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Bren Offline
Member
#8
I've grown them before but they were rather small, used them in coleslaw and gratins mostly.

One of MrB's friends eats them like apples.
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MartinH Offline
Member
#9
I grow Kohl Rabi most years. I sowed some seed this week, in fact.

We've tried various ways of cooking them but there's so little flavour left that it doesn't seem worth the bother. They are nice raw though, we generally cut them into sticks to eat as part of a salad or with dips. Like it says in SC's article, they are sort of turnip-like with a hint of mild radish.
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Veggie Offline
Super Pest Controller
#10
I've never eaten it - have tried to grow it a couple of times - just because I had seeds. It was a very half-hearted try and failed miserably. I'm not a fan of turnips and it sounds like a turnip with legs!
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