Collards, along with kale, cabbage, kohlrabi, cauliflower, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts are all varieties of the same species, Brassica oleracea. The only difference between these plants are the differences that humans introduced over thousands of years of selective cultivation. Collards are part of the family known botanically by the name Brassica oleracea acephala which translates to "headless cabbage vegetable."
Collards are the favorite green of the American South, especially in the winter, after the first frost. If grown during hot summers, collards develop a strong bitter flavor. They are often prepared with other similar green leaf vegetables, such as kale, turnip greens, spinach, and mustard greens in "mixed greens" or "mess o'greens." Many Southerners believe that they can look forward to a year of good fortune if they eat collards and black-eyed peas on New Year's Day. Others might hang a fresh collard leaf over their door to keep bad spirits away, and a fresh leaf on the forehead is said to cure a headache.
Bonobos eat mostly fruits (40-90% of their diet) and vegetables, but will also eat shoots, leaves, flowers, seeds, barks, pith, herbs, insect larvae, and earthworms. Bonobos do not aggressively hunt mammals. On rare occasions, they have been observed to capture duikers (small antelope) or flying squirrels. They are also known to eat termite clay for essential minerals, and have been recorded to eat 113 different types of plants per year.According to the New York Times, "The menu for bonobos at the San Diego Zoo includes bananas, broccoli, cabbage, collards, corn, celery, grapes, green beans, kale, lettuce, melons, onion, papaya, pear, spinach and turnips."Bonobos are also known to eat a large amount of Terrestrial Herbaceous Vegetation (THV) which they consume to provide their main source of protein (duikers are a delicacy).
For good luck
Collards are a type of cabbage that keeps a loose head of leaves. A sentence that uses collards would be, "For dinner, they had a hearty dinner of collard greens and ham."
Collards are a type of leafy green vegetable commonly used in southern cuisine. In Hindi, collards are known as "हरी पत्तियाँ" (hari pattiyan) or "हरी साग" (hari saag).
(collards are cabbage-like plants, Brassica oleraceaoften found growing wild outside their cultivated fields; they have edible green leaves)"The poorest of families in the South were sometimes forced to gather collards for food."
Collards and cornbread
The major differences between collards and kale stems from their appearance and flavor. Collards have a medium green hue, an oval shape and smooth texture. Kale on the other hand is darker with grayish green broad leaves that are crinkled. Kale is also the stronger tasting of the two, thicker, chewier leaves, can taste a bit bitter compared to collards.
Yes, in small amounts.
Some people likes to eat collard green.
Between 6.5 and 7.5.
Young cabbage, used as "greens"; esp. a kind cultivated for that purpose; colewort.
Collards originated as a primitive non-head-forming cabbage, the wild Brassica oleracea plant, in the Mediterranean region, over 2000 years ago. Ancient Greeks grew kale along with collards, and the Romans grew several kinds of collards before the Christian era. Julius Caesar is said to have eaten a generous serving of collards after attending royal banquets to prevent indigestion . Either the Romans or the Celts introduced the vegetable to Britain and France in the 4th century B.C.In America, the first mention of "coleworts" (collards) was around 1669. Enslaved Africans in the southern American colonies embraced collard greens in their cooking. African Americans developed recipes for the fast-growing collards, and a style of cooking that eventually evolved into what we know today as "Soul Food." They kept at least one tradition from Africa: drinking the juice, called pot liquor, left over from cooking the greens.Collards are also called couve in Brazil, couve-galega or "couve portuguesa" (among several other names) in Portugal, kovi or kobi in Cape Verde, berza in Spanish-speaking countries, raštika in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia and raštan in Montenegro and Serbia. In Kashmir, it is called haak.Although they appear very different, collards, kale, cabbage, kohlrabi, cauliflower, broccoli, and Brussels sprouts are all varieties of the same species, Brassica oleracea. The only difference between these plants are the differences that humans introduced over thousands of years of selective cultivation. Collards are part of the family known botanically by the name Brassica oleracea acephala which translates to "headless cabbage vegetable."Collards remain the favorite green of the American South, especially in the winter, after the first frost. If grown during hot summers, collards develop a strong bitter flavor. Many Southerners believe that they can look forward to a year of good fortune if they eat collards and black-eyed peas on New Year's Day. Others might hang a fresh collard leaf over their door to keep bad spirits away, and a fresh leaf on the forehead is said to cure a headache.
They use the barter system, paying with firewood, collards, and whatever they have to give.
They use the barter system, paying with firewood, collards, and whatever they have to give.