Yod Fah and other varieties of Kai Lan/ Gailan aka chinese broccoli
- bower
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Yod Fah and other varieties of Kai Lan/ Gailan aka chinese broccoli
I first saw the Yod Fah mentioned in @GoDawgs thread, and since I received seeds in Nicky's swap I grew this one as part of my late winter greenhouse greens. They are different enough from the Gai Lan I grew previously that I thought I would start this thread about varieties.
The Yod Fah are vigorous large plants and continuing to produce florets for me now in June after a long stint in the late winter greenhouse. Same gorgeous large white flowers as the other one.
So these are the differences that I noticed, or seemed to, because conditions may have been (or likely were) a bit different from previous grow of a "Kai Lan" without a name.
In late winter/early spring greenhouse, when I opened the vent to a cool breeze, the Yod Fah actually wilted in the cold, while my tomato plants were ho hum about it. So they seem to be more of a heat tolerant, not cold tolerant variety.
Also I found that there is a stronger 'brassica' taste on the Yod Fah, compared to the nameless one which was entirely sweet.
And third, when I let the Yod Fah go a bit further before cutting, the stems quickly got woody, which didn't happen with the other one.
So I am wondering about Kai Lan varieties that are best adapted to cooler climate and consistently sweet and tender.
Has anyone else grown them and have any comments or recommendations?
I am still enjoying the Yod Fah which is outdoors in a tub and still making florets for me after enduring the gamut of weathers hot and cold. I intended to transplant them when spring came, but they were too large to move. Wrong timing!
The Yod Fah are vigorous large plants and continuing to produce florets for me now in June after a long stint in the late winter greenhouse. Same gorgeous large white flowers as the other one.
So these are the differences that I noticed, or seemed to, because conditions may have been (or likely were) a bit different from previous grow of a "Kai Lan" without a name.
In late winter/early spring greenhouse, when I opened the vent to a cool breeze, the Yod Fah actually wilted in the cold, while my tomato plants were ho hum about it. So they seem to be more of a heat tolerant, not cold tolerant variety.
Also I found that there is a stronger 'brassica' taste on the Yod Fah, compared to the nameless one which was entirely sweet.
And third, when I let the Yod Fah go a bit further before cutting, the stems quickly got woody, which didn't happen with the other one.
So I am wondering about Kai Lan varieties that are best adapted to cooler climate and consistently sweet and tender.
Has anyone else grown them and have any comments or recommendations?
I am still enjoying the Yod Fah which is outdoors in a tub and still making florets for me after enduring the gamut of weathers hot and cold. I intended to transplant them when spring came, but they were too large to move. Wrong timing!
AgCan Zone 5a/USDA zone 4
temperate marine climate
yearly precip 61 inches/1550 mm
temperate marine climate
yearly precip 61 inches/1550 mm
- ponyexpress
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Re: Yod Fah and other varieties of Kai Lan/ Gailan aka chinese broccoli
I’ve grown several varieties in my effort to find the perfect Chinese broccoli. I can’t remember which one I had success with. I find it tricky to figure the right time to harvest them. A few times I made the mistake of waiting too long and they went to seed