mustard greens
A cabbage head is an apical (or terminal) bud.
A cabbage ball kind of looks like lettuce except in ball form.
You are eating the head of the cabbage plant.
After you cut the cabbage head off of the root. Replant the root, and it will flower and seed. Plant the seeds and there you have it.
Cabbage is cut off the plant at the base of the head.
A cabbage head is an apical (or terminal) bud.
Yes, cabbage is a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a vegetable, a thing.
An average head of shredded cabbage weighs around 2-3 pounds. This can vary depending on the size of the cabbage head and how finely it is shredded.
A cabbage ball kind of looks like lettuce except in ball form.
A head of cabbage has a head but never weeps.
You are eating the head of the cabbage plant.
There was no cabbage. There was a chicken. And, look! he's crossing the road. Or... He ate the cabbage to get a-head. Get it? Ahead, a-head? Give it a minute, you'll catch on.
yes
This is impossible to answer since it depends on what other vegetables you add to the slaw and what type of and how much dressing - both of which will effect the final amount of slaw. Plus cabbage heads come in a wide variety of sizes / weights.
RED CABBAGE There are 62 grams total carbohydrate in one average head of red cabbage, 5 inch diameter, 1lb 8 ounces or 839g (dietary fiber 18g). GREEN CABBAGE There are 53 grams total carbohydrate in one average head of standard green cabbage or Savoy cabbage, 5-6 inches diameter, 2lb or 908g (dietary fiber 23g).
No. It is from the late Middle English and Old French. It does mean head in those. It is also from the Canadian English slang "Cabbage-town" were people were said to be backward and eat nothing but cabbage.
Yes, you can eat cabbage leaves that don't form a head. These types of cabbage are known as loose-leaf or non-heading varieties, and their leaves are still edible and nutritious.