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Don’t like cabbage? This sweet, buttery and beautiful variety might change your mind

How does a simple fruit or vegetable emerge from nowhere to build its own niche brand, asks Terry Durack.

Terry Durack
Terry Durack

It starts with “What’s that?” There’s something on the menu that you’ve never heard of. Do you bluff it – or cry for help? I cry for help.

It could be chulpi, beni imo or ooray, all of which I’ve come across on menus in the past seven days. “What’s that?” I ask, and they tell me that it’s Ecuadorean roasted corn or Japanese purple sweet potato or an Indigenous name for Davidson plum.

The real story, though, is the journey these ingredients take from those first pioneering steps on a menu to being household names. From being exotic and rare (for some, at least) to becoming shopping-list staples.

In the 1940s, before the postwar waves of European, Asian and Middle Eastern migration, eggplant was little-known in Australia. Then it started sneaking onto market stalls and menus. Now it’s “Pick up some eggplant for me? We’re having moussaka tonight.”

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Eggplant (right), meet hispi cabbage (left).
Eggplant (right), meet hispi cabbage (left). Simon Letch

How does it work – that a simple fruit or vegetable can emerge from nowhere to build its own niche brand?

Enterprising growers and market-stall holders are usually the first stop. Chefs, eager to work with something new and exciting, will pick up on it. Diners like us turn up and say, “What’s that?” and then like it enough to want to cook it at home. If we’re lucky, this word-of-mouth food chain will complete itself and a “passing fad” becomes more available.

The power of word-of-mouth has changed dramatically, however, from the over-the-fence chats of old to today’s social-media whirlwinds. Suddenly, something – butter boards, feta pasta, Salt Bae – is all over TikTok and the next day, it’s gone. (If you haven’t heard of any of these, you probably looked away from your phone for a minute and a half.)

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Take the hispi cabbage, also known as sweetheart cabbage or pointed cabbage for its charming, conical shape. It’s sweet, buttery and beautiful and doesn’t smell like, you know, cabbage.

Already much-loved in Europe and the UK, the hispi has done the hard yards here at farmers’ markets and top restaurants, but never quite cracked social media.

Bring back word-of-mouth, I say. Talk it up. If you see it, buy two and give one to a friend. With any luck, they’ll take one look at it and say, “What’s that?”

theemptyplate@goodweekend.com.au

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Terry DurackTerry Durack is the chief restaurant critic for The Sydney Morning Herald and Good Food.

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