8 comments

  • Sharlin52 minutes ago
    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.
  • sebastiennight5 hours ago
    I already knew about this phylogenetic tree (although I have always heard the common ancestor be called the &quot;wild mustard&quot;, 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&#x27;t had sprouts in years you might want to give them a second try (salted, oiled and baked, not boiled or steamed of course!)
    • cpard4 hours ago
      I think the sprouts trauma is the result of picking the wrong cooking method.<p>I was so surprised when I tried baked sprouts for the first time (use a really host cast iron skilet for even better results) that I started to believe that every vegetable can be delicious as long as you bake it!
      • 0_____04 hours ago
        The modern cultivars literally taste different, it&#x27;s not just cooking method. The bitter compounds were identified and bred out.
        • cpard4 hours ago
          How long ago did this happen?
          • 0_____04 hours ago
            1990s research at Novartis, not sure how quickly the new cultivars were adopted,.maybe someone else can chime in
      • aziaziazi2 hours ago
        There’s many delicious and easy ways to eat vegetable! Two of my favorite:<p>- Belgian Stoemp: basically smashed-potatoes with smashed-other legumes. Cook everything together (with herbs if you can), smash, add lipid and salt and you’re done!<p>- German Ein Topf: put vegetables, beans and sausages in a pot (I use tofu ones or tempeh). Cover, cook slowly. It’s almost a salty Tajin from the north.<p>- Recover bland vegetables (sprouts or anything) to a fantastic soup in 5 minutes: add a bit of water, coconut cream (or caw cream &#x2F; silken tofu…), spices. A bit of tahin and corail lentils if you have. Mix and adjust water.<p>Bon appétit :)
  • Razengan7 minutes ago
    Centuries of selective breeding would turn me into different vegetables too
  • estebank3 hours ago
    Ah, yes. You can&#x27;t throw a rock at produce without hitting a brassica oleracia.
    • defrost3 hours ago
      The roots of the young Brachychiton acuminatus can be cooked in ashes and eaten like a sweet potato .. but despite the <i>vast</i> number of rocks in its native habitat .. not a single brassica oleracia will be found by throwing them.
  • Azrael30003 hours ago
    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:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;Frioffo53wo?t=1205" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;youtu.be&#x2F;Frioffo53wo?t=1205</a>
  • goodmythical3 days ago
    Fun fact, peppers, petunias, datura, and tobacco are all in the same family: Solanaceae.
    • hollerith3 hours ago
      Sure, but cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, etc, are all the same <i>species</i>.
    • 0_____04 hours ago
      you have done potatoes a profound insult by not including them in this list
      • inkyoto4 hours ago
        As well as to eggplant and belladonna.
        • masklinn3 hours ago
          And tomatoes.
          • 0_____03 hours ago
            you are both right of course<p>but for some reason my fealty to potato does not extend to tomatoes and eggplant quite the same way. i feel toward potatoes sort of how gary Larson feels about cows
  • hollerith3 hours ago
    What I appreciate most about these vegetables is that they&#x27;re much lower in that pesky <i>oxalic acid</i> than most vegetables in the human diet.
  • locusofself3 hours ago
    I love these vegetables. Especially Broccolini and Brussel Sprouts. YUM