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  1. Oct 1, 2023 · Jefferson first planted these cabbage offshoots in 1767 — years before America had even declared its independence. An Italian vegetable becomes an American staple. Though Jefferson and other ...

  2. Jul 22, 2021 · There are records of Thomas Jefferson, who was an avid gardener, experimenting with broccoli seeds brought over from Italy in the late 1700s, but although commercial cultivation of broccoli dates back to the 1500s, it did not become a popular foodstuff in the United States until Southern Italian immigrants brought it over in the early 1920s.

    • Peggy Trowbridge Filippone
  3. Jun 18, 2012 · June 18, 2012. Despite its health benefits -- or perhaps because of them -- broccoli has become one of Washington's favorite political metaphors. rhwalker22/ Flickr. I have a soft spot in my ...

  4. Broccoli was becoming popular in the United States and had been referred by Gary Lucier of the Department of Agriculture as the "vegetable of the 80s". [ 2 ] [ 15 ] Consumption of broccoli had doubled in that decade, increasing from an annual average of 3 pounds (1.4 kilograms) per person in 1980 to 6.8 pounds (3.1 kilograms) per person in 1988. [ 16 ]

  5. Feb 2, 2024 · There are records of Thomas Jefferson, who was an avid gardener, experimenting with broccoli seeds brought over from Italy in the late 1700s, but although commercial cultivation of broccoli dates back to the 1500s, it did not become a popular foodstuff in the United States until Southern Italian immigrants brought it over in the early 1920s.

  6. Dec 7, 2023 · Episode Notes. In March 1990, a story broke that shocked the nation: George H.W. Bush had banned broccoli from Air Force One. The frenzy that came next would change the fate of a vegetable—and ...

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  8. Mar 26, 2020 · The vegetable the president disliked. In 1990, The National reports on the broccoli-hating food preferences of U.S. President George H.W. Bush. It had been trendy during the 1980s, but that didn't ...