Not nearly as drastic as the cabbage case, but to me it’s also interesting that there are three ancestral, wild species of citrus fruit – mandarin, pomelo, and citron – and all the popular modern cultivars are hybrids of those three.
I already knew about this phylogenetic tree (although I have always heard the common ancestor be called the "wild mustard", not wild cabbage), but the article was quite interesting.<p>I only wish that as a PSA, they had included the reminder to people over 30 years old who hate Brussels sprouts, that the delicious ones you can eat today are not the ones they hated in their youth, and if you haven't had sprouts in years you might want to give them a second try (salted, oiled and baked, not boiled or steamed of course!)
Centuries of selective breeding would turn me into different vegetables too
Ah, yes. You can't throw a rock at produce without hitting a brassica oleracia.
When I read the title, I immediately though, I think this is going to be about Brussel sprouts etc. as I just saw a video [0] that mentions the same lineage. The video is part of the series about the evolution of the flagellum, which is really well made.<p>[0]: <a href="https://youtu.be/Frioffo53wo?t=1205" rel="nofollow">https://youtu.be/Frioffo53wo?t=1205</a>
Fun fact, peppers, petunias, datura, and tobacco are all in the same family: Solanaceae.
Sure, but cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, etc, are all the same <i>species</i>.
you have done potatoes a profound insult by not including them in this list
What I appreciate most about these vegetables is that they're much lower in that pesky <i>oxalic acid</i> than most vegetables in the human diet.
I love these vegetables. Especially Broccolini and Brussel Sprouts. YUM