What to do with Kohlrabi?

These beauties showed up in my CSA box yesterday.  Believe me, I wouldn’t have a clue what they were unless the farmers included a cheat sheet in the box, which they did.

Because of the cheat sheet, I know that these are kohlrabi.  Here’s what the farmer had to say about this vegetable:

Kohlrabi is a tasty vegetable that you can eat either raw or cooked…Its flavor is delicately sweet, and its texture is moist, yet crisp.  Kohlrabi tastes mildly like broccoli with just a hint of cabbage…As a remarkable source of vitamin C, kohlrabi hleps your body absorb iron…A half-cup of kohlrabi offers 245 grams of potassium, 25 I.U. of vitamin A, 43.4 milligrams of vitamin C, 11.3 micrograms of folic acid, 16.8 mg of calcium and about 10 mg of choline.  It’s a low-fat vegetable with only 19 calories in a half-cup serving that provides a healthy 23 mg of omega-3 fatty acids and 1.5 grams of protein.

Sounds like something I should be eating!  But how?  What to do with these lovelies?

Chop ’em up and eat ’em raw in a salad?  Cook them in a stir-fry?  I need ideas!

Have you ever eaten kohlrabi?  How did you prepare it?

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32 Comments

  1. My dad and I were unsure as to how kohlrabi should be prepared, so we sliced them on a mandolin along with some potatoes, then layered them in a baking dish to make a potato/kohlrabi casserole. We were just experimenting but it came out pretty good! We used cream, crushed red pepper, a little cheese, etc. It was like au gratin style. Maybe you’d like it!

    1. I’ve seen green kohlrabi at our local grocery store, but I don’t think I’ve seen the red/purple in stores. The farm where we are part of a CSA grew that variety.

  2. Where can I buy both the green and red kohlrabi, all I’ve been able to find are seeds, I would like to get the produce already harvested first and try it them maybe try to grow some.

    Thanks

    1. Thanks, Lisa! We should be getting kohlrabi for next few weeks, so I’ll definitely need more ways to prepare it. I made a great salad that I’ll be posting soon.

  3. I was sitting at the park today, thumbing through the June issue of Martha Stewart Living and I found an entire page article on kohlrabi and what to do with it! I immediately thought of you. Some ideas it listed are to chop it into a slaw (kohlrabi and apples cut into matchsticks, dressed with EVOO and lemon juice), bake it into chips (bake at 250* until crisp), or saute with onions and cream (using the leaves too, season with S&P and nutmeg). Now I want to go get some kohlrabi too!

  4. I too have never had kohlrabi but now I am going to look for it at my farmer’s market tomorrow morning.

  5. I have never heard of kohlrabi and I thought I was pretty well-versed in the rarely used vegetables. Will you please let us know how you end up using it? And, how it ends up tasting? Would love to be inspired to go buy some. Good Luck. Wish I could offer you suggestions but it looks as if you’ve gotten some good ones already.

  6. When you make something would you please take pictures of the process of preparing it? I have seen them but I have no idea what to do with them either. I would love to see the whole process. Thanks!

  7. Here is a recipe from an old issue of Clean Eating Magazine that uses both the top and the bottom of the kohlrabi. It is SO good, and somehow much better than the sum of it’s parts. Looking at the recipe it seems like a basic vegetable soup, but I was completely blown away that it ended up being so tasty!

    Kohlrabi Vegetable Soup
    Serves 5

    INGREDIENTS
    1 Tbsp olive oil
    1 large clove garlic, chopped
    1 medium onion, diced
    1 medium carrot, peeled and thinly sliced into rounds
    2 celery stalks, thinly sliced
    32 oz low-sodium vegetable broth
    1/2 cup shredded red cabbage
    2 kohlrabi bulbs, peeled and diced
    4 to 6 kohlrabi leaves, coarsely chopped
    2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley

    INSTRUCTIONS
    In a large pot, heat oil over medium heat. Add garlic, onion, carrot and celery, stirring occasionally until vegetables are tender, 8 to 10 minutes.

    Add broth, cabbage and kohlrabi bulbs and bring to a boil

    Reduce heat and simmer, stirring occasionally, for 20 to 25 minutes, until vegetables are fully cooked. Add kohlrabi leaves and parsley and cook until heated through.

    Nutrients per 1-cup serving
    Calories: 71, Total fat: 3g, Sat. Fat: 0.5g, Carbs: 10g, Fiber: 3g, Sugars: 4g, Protein: 1g, Sodium: 161mg, Cholesterol: 0mg

  8. For the heads: shred it, then marinate in vinegar/lavendar salt for 1-3 hours, squeeze out all juice and serve cold on the side with a panini

    For the leaves: saute pieces with garlic and little olive oil, white beans, and salt

  9. Ooooooh, I love kholrabi! I usually get the green kind though, I’m not sure why, the purple ones are beautiful! I like it best raw. It tastes kind of like a broccoli stem and a radish to me. The first year we had them in our garden we just ate them all raw, haha. I peel the kholrabi the same way I do broccoli stems, cut off the top(or bottom) and then just pull the skin off with the edge of my knife. I’ve had it steamed but I wasn’t too impressed. I would assume it would be awesome in a stir fry though!

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