As usual, I look forward to reading Richard Cornish’s regular column Brain Food in The Age on Tuesdays and today he is writing about Kohlrabi (September 7, 2021).
Just as listening to music has the power to bring up memories and reading about Kohlrabi brings up memories of Sicily.
Below are recipes from my blog that use Kohlrabi quite differently to the chefs that Richard mentions in Brain Food including David Moyle, the creative director of Harvest Newrybar near Byron Bay, and Rosalin Virnik from Anchor Restaurant in Melbourne’s Elwood.
Here’s my bit about Kohlrabi and a couple of recipes below.
Cavolo is the generic term for a range of vegetables n the Brassicaceae family. In Italian cavoli are cauliflowers, cavolo verza is a cabbage, there is cavolo nero (Tuscan kale), cavolo rosso (red cabbage).
Just to be perverse, Kohlrabi are called just cavoli in Sicily and in Italian it is cavolo rapa..
Just to confuse things even further, Sicilians call cauliflowers broccoli.
As well as the purple coloured Kohlrabi roots there are light green ones; the root is always sold complete with the leaves and the whole plant is eaten.
One way Kohlrabi is eaten in most of Sicily and Italy is boiled as a vegetable side dish with a dressing of extra virgin olive oil and a squeeze of lemon juice, but the preferred way is to cook it with pasta, as a wet pasta dish.
In Ragusa (Sicily) where my father’s family is from they cook it with homemade pasta called Causunedda.
See recipe and photos:
KOHLRABI with pasta (Causunnedda )
A WET PASTA DISH WITH KOHLRABI
I have also seen Kohlrabi in markets in Vietnam
KOHLRABI and TENERUMI, shared between cultures of Sicily and Vietnam.
Not Sicilian, but a good salad:
KOHLRABI, FENNEL, CELERIAC AND DAIKON MAKE A GOOD SALAD (AND OTHER RECIPES)
In another of Richard Cornish’s regular column Brain Food, he referred to Pasta Con Le Sarde, an iconic dish in Sicilian cooking.
PASTA CON LE SARDE recipes:
PASTA CON LE SARDE, Iconic Sicilian made easy
PASTA CON LE SARDE (Pasta with sardines, from Palermo, made with fennel, pine nuts and currants)
PASTA CON LE SARDE, an iconic Sicilian recipe from Palermo. Cooked at Slow Food Festival Melbourne