Horticulture Magazine

Growing Calabrese AKA ‘Broccoli’ – Here Are Some Top Tips From Allotment Gardeners

Brassica oleracea plant in a field, ready for harvesting
By ELIZABETH WADDINGTON

Elizabeth is a Permaculture Garden Designer, Sustainability Consultant and Professional Writer, working as an advocate for positive change. She graduated from the University of St. Andrews with an MA in English and Philosophy and obtained a Diploma in Applied Permaculture Design from the Permaculture Association.

/ Updated October 14th, 2024
Reviewed By DAN ORI
Dan Ori, MCIHort, Horticulturist

Dan has over 27 years’ under his belt caring for plants and gardens. Working as a Horticultural Instructor and Consultant, he draws on a diverse range of experience that includes working as a Head Gardener, Tree Surgeon, Garden Centre Trouble Shooter, and writer of academic papers. Dan has a Level 3 Diploma in Horticulture and is currently a candidate for the RHS’s most prestigious award – The Master of Horticulture.

/ Meets Our Editorial Guidelines
Contributions From JANICE SHIPP
Janice Shipp, MHort, MCIHort - RHS Herbaceous Plant Committee

Janice Shipp is a Writer with 15 years' experience as Principal Researcher for Which? Gardening magazine. She has received her RHS MHort and City and Guilds Planting Design qualifications and is a member of the RHS Herbaceous Plant Committee. Janice is also a member of both the Garden Media Guild and Chartered Institute of Horticulture - and was Chair of forum on a Penstemon trial for the Royal Horticultural Society.

, EMMA BAILEY
Emma Bailey, 'The Pink Shed'

Emma Bailey started her blog, The Pink Shed, in 2021 and is now a popular allotment blogger, with over 100,000 followers on Instagram alone. She has released her own range of clothes for allotmenteering and has designed her very own gardening calendar.

Calabrese is the proper name for what most people think of as broccoli here in the UK.

There is a lot of confusion over the name, but those vegetables with large green heads that look like little trees are a specific type of broccoli known as Calabrese.

Calabrese are sown in spring and harvested over the summer.

broccoli florets in focus

Sprouting broccoli, on the other hand, is planted one year, overwinters – and then provides its yield not in its first season but the following year.

Sprouting broccoli has many smaller florets, rather than one central initial head. These are often purple or white in colour.

Overview

Botanical NameBrassica oleracea var. italica, calabrese
Common Name(s)Broccoli
Plant TypeVegetable
Native AreaCultivated
Hardiness RatingH3
FoliageBiennial but harvested first season
When To SowMarch, April, May, June
Harvesting MonthsJuly, August
Sunlight

Preferred
Full Sun / Light Shade

Exposure
Sheltered

Size

Height
0.1 – 0.5M

Spread
0.1 – 0.5M

Soil

Preferred
Most firm, fertile soil

Moisture
Moisture retentive yet well-drained

pH
Any

Both the plant referred to as Calabrese in the UK, and broccoli that overwinters, are Brassica oleracea.

Both Calabrese and sprouting broccoli are in a cultivar group called ‘Italica’ within that species.

Cauliflower and Romanesco also belong to this group.

close up of mature broccoli plant
Calabrese Broccoli

Many other brassicas that we grow as garden crops in a vegetable garden, including kale, collard greens, cabbage, Brussels sprouts and kohlrabi belong to different cultivar groups within this species.

Calabrese, what we most typically think of as broccoli today, is named after Calabria in Italy.1The Joy Of Purple Broccoli. (2022, January 26). Buffalo Market. Retrieved March 13, 2023, from https://www.buffalomarket.com/blogs/news/the-joy-of-purple-broccoli

It is a plant which grows up to 60cm in height, and produces green heads up to around 15cm across.

While there are also plenty of great reasons to grow sprouting broccoli in your garden, Calabrese is easier for beginners, quicker to crop, and is a staple of home growing in cool temperate climate zones.

Calabrese Cultivars

Once you have decided to grow Calabrese at home, the first thing you need to think about is which particular named cultivar of Calabrese broccoli you would like to grow.

” I love Calabrese because it’s so easy to grow and cook,” says Garden Writer Janice Shipp.

two bunches of Marathon Calabrese fresh from harvesting

Named cultivars of this type of broccoli in the UK include:

  • ‘Belstar’
  • ‘Fiesta’
  • ‘Green Magic’
  • ‘Ironman’
  • ‘Kabuki’
  • ‘Marathon’
  • ‘Monaco’
  • ‘Monclano’
  • ‘Sakura’

Planting Calabrese

Calabrese is best grown in a fertile growing area in full sun or very light shade.

The soil should be moisture-retentive yet reasonably free draining.

Since Calabrese and other brassicas have high nitrogen requirements, it is best to plant into a bed that has been amended with plenty of organic matter.

gloved hand planting a broccoli seedling in the ground

It can also be helpful to place Calabrese into a bed that has just been vacated by nitrogen-fixing plants (such as broad beans or peas which have overwintered, for example).

Before planting out Calabrese, make sure you have enriched the growing area with plenty of good quality compost or well-rotted manure.

“Brassicas like Calabrese need protecting, not only from slugs and snails but from the dreaded cabbage white butterfly,” shares Allotmenteer Emma Bailey.

“These like to lay their eggs on the leaves and once the caterpillars hatch, they can eat your crop within a couple of days! Be sure to net them as soon as you plant them out.

“Pigeons also love a good munch on brassica plants. Make sure the netting goes all the way to the bottom of the raised bed so that birds don’t get underneath and get trapped.”

Companion Plants For Broccoli

Chilli, lettuce and broccoli grown in rows of a garden intercropping scheme

If you have sown some Calabrese, or are thinking about doing so, it is also a good idea to think about which other plants to include in the same growing area.

Companion planting can help you make the most of your space, and can increase the yield you are able to achieve in your vegetable plot.

Calabrese can grow well alongside other brassicas, and including your brassicas in the same bed can make it easier to rotate your crops.

marigolds flowering in yellow and orange next to a range of companion vegetables in a large garden

We’ll look at crop rotation a little later in this article.

But in addition to growing other brassicas, you should also consider adding other plants which work well, and which will aid the Calabrese and help enrich biodiversity in your organic garden.

Other common crops which will work well alongside your Calabrese broccoli include:

  • Beans – for nitrogen fixation.
  • Beetroot – they like similar conditions, and beetroots require little calcium, which is good for brassicas.
  • Lettuce – growing ‘quick-growing’ lettuces between Calabrese helps make the most of the space and these will be harvested before the space (and resources) are required by your main crop. It’s also good to let chickweed spread and give ground cover between Calabrese. This weed is also a useful edible, and has attractive flowers.
  • Onions, Leeks or Garlic – these may help to repel pests that may plague your Calabrese, such as cabbage worm, weevil and cabbage looper.
  • Aromatic Herbs – for example: rosemary, thyme, sage, dill, mint etc. – these will also repel, confuse or act as a distraction to pests.
  • Flowers – such as marigolds, borage and nasturtiums – all of which can be excellent companion plants in a vegetable garden.

Keep Calabrese away from asparagus, sweetcorn, squash, and other heavy feeders, which will compete too much with your broccoli plants.

Also keep brassicas away from tomatoes and peppers, since these can attract verticillium wilt, which can spread to damage your Calabrese.

Some gardeners also report that radishes do not do very well when planted near brassicas like Calabrese.

Plant Care

Mulching

Mulching is an important part of organic gardening, and it is particularly important when growing ‘hungry’ plants like Calabrese broccoli.

Choosing the right mulches for the right crops is important.

When it comes to brassicas, and other nitrogen-hungry plants, a green, nitrogen-rich mulch can work wonders.

broccoli plant covered in water droplets

For example, grass clippings (especially from lawns rich in clover), or other leafy green material can make a good mulch to lay between your Calabrese.

As this leafy material breaks down, it will give the brassicas the nitrogen they need.

Of course, you can also mulch around brassicas with homemade or commercial compost, leaf mould or well-rotted manure.

Crop Rotation

Annual brassicas like Calabrese are one of the crops that are best rotated between different growing areas.

When brassicas are grown in the same bed year after year, diseases such as clubroot (a fungal infection that can destroy brassicas by infecting their roots) are more likely to take hold.

broccoli seedlings planted in rows

Clubroot can also be avoided by making sure that the soil is slightly alkaline (using lime to raise pH if necessary), and by avoiding waterlogging and compaction.

Brassicas will appreciate it if they are placed in a crop rotation following peas, beans or other nitrogen fixers.

They are often followed by potatoes in a four-year rotation, and the potatoes are then followed by alliums (onion family) and root crops.

References

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