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Red Cabbage Seeds
$2.99
Red Cabbage
Bold, beautiful, and packed with nutrition, Red Cabbage is a garden showstopper that earns its place in both the vegetable patch and on the dinner table. With its striking deep purple-red heads and crisp, slightly peppery flavor, Red Cabbage is as versatile as it is stunning — perfect for slaws, braised dishes, pickling, and fresh salads. A cool-season workhorse that stores exceptionally well, it’s a smart addition to any home garden built for flavor and function.
Variety Highlights
- Type: Heirloom, open-pollinated
- Head Size: 4–6 lbs, dense and firm
- Color: Deep purple-red with waxy outer leaves
- Flavor: Crisp, mildly peppery, slightly sweet when cooked
- Days to Maturity: Approximately 70–85 days from transplant
- Best For: Fresh slaws, braising, pickling, fermenting (red sauerkraut), and long-term storage
- Storage: Keeps for months in a cool, humid environment
Planting Instructions
- When to Plant: Start seeds indoors 6–8 weeks before last frost. Transplant outdoors 2–4 weeks before last frost — cabbage tolerates light frost. For fall harvest, start seeds in midsummer.
- Sunlight: Full sun (6–8 hours per day).
- Soil: Rich, well-draining soil with a pH of 6.0–6.8. Amend generously with compost before planting.
- Planting Depth (seeds): Sow seeds ¼–½ inch deep indoors.
- Seed Quantity: avg. 600 seeds
- Transplant Spacing: Space transplants 18–24 inches apart in rows 24–36 inches apart.
- Watering: Water consistently, about 1–1.5 inches per week. Even moisture prevents heads from splitting. Avoid overhead watering.
- Germination: Seeds germinate in 7–10 days at 65–75°F.
- Fertilizing: Apply a balanced fertilizer at transplanting, then side-dress with nitrogen-rich fertilizer when heads begin to form.
- Harvesting: Harvest when heads feel firm and solid when squeezed. Cut at the base with a sharp knife. Leaving the root in the ground may produce small secondary heads.
Growing Tips
- Use row covers to protect young transplants from cabbage worms and aphids.
- Rotate cabbage with non-brassica crops each year to prevent soil-borne disease buildup.
- A light frost after maturity actually sweetens the flavor.
- Red cabbage holds its color beautifully when pickled with a splash of vinegar.