There are four major groups of cauliflower. • Italian: This specimen is diverse in appearance, biennial, and annual in type. This group includes white,
Romanesco, and various brown, green, purple, and yellow cultivars. This type is the ancestral form from which the others were derived. • Northern European annuals: These are used in Europe and North America for summer and fall harvests. They were developed in Germany in the 18th century and include the old cultivars Erfurt and Snowball. • Northwest biennial: Used in Europe for winter and early spring harvest, developed in France in the 19th century and includes the old cultivars Angers and Roscoff. • Asian: A tropical cauliflower used in China and India, it was developed in India during the 19th century from the now-abandoned Cornish type and includes old varieties Early Benaras and Early Patna.
Domestication Cauliflowers are an "arrested inflorescence" subspecies of
B. oleracea that arose around 2,500 years ago.
Varieties There are hundreds of historic and current commercial varieties used around the world. A comprehensive list of about 80 North American varieties is maintained at
North Carolina State University.
Colors • White cauliflower is the most common color of cauliflower, having a contrasting white head (also called "curd", having a similar appearance to
cheese curd), surrounded by green leaves. Cultivars include 'Cheddar' and 'Orange Bouquet'. • Green cauliflower in the
B. oleracea Botrytis Group is sometimes called
broccoflower. It is available in the normal curd (head) shape and with a
fractal spiral curd called
Romanesco broccoli. Both have been commercially available in the U.S. and Europe since the early 1990s. Green-headed varieties include 'Alverda, 'Green Goddess', and 'Vorda'. Romanesco varieties include 'Minaret' and 'Veronica'. • The purple color is caused by the presence of
anthocyanins, water-soluble pigments that are found in many other plants and plant-based products, such as
red cabbage and
red wine. Varieties include 'Graffiti' and 'Purple Cape'. File:Cauliflower broccoflower.jpg|White and green cauliflower File:Cauliflower romanesco.JPG|Green
Romanesco cauliflower File:7367-Brassica oleracea var. botrytis.JPG|Orange cauliflower File:Purplec.png|Purple cauliflower
Phytochemicals Cauliflower contains several non-nutrient
phytochemicals common in the
cabbage family that are under preliminary research for their potential properties, including
isothiocyanates and
glucosinolates. Boiling reduces the levels of cauliflower glucosinolates, while other cooking methods, such as
steaming,
microwaving, and
stir frying, have no significant effect on glucosinolate levels. == Etymology ==