C stands for... Cabbage
My first thought is: I don't like cabbage. Cabbage is heavy on the stomach, difficult to digest and it makes my intestines hurt.
As a child, I ate 5 types of cabbage: sauerkraut (made in a Cologne pot or from the barrel), red cabbage (with or without pieces of apple), cauliflower, farmer's cabbage (a type of cabbage I have never seen in any other country than the Netherlands. When translated, it turns out to be a different type of cabbage) and Brussels sprouts.
Sauerkraut and kale are eaten in winter. Cabbage is boiled and mixed through mashed potatoes. This along with bacon and smoked sausage is one of the stamppots eaten in the Netherlands.
I never liked red cabbage. One of the housekeepers cooked it until the colour was out. As a child, I found it an unappetising morsel. I have eaten it at most 10 times since then (maybe less times).
Brussels sprouts are also among the winter vegetables. They say you have to love them. I especially do with applesauce (with some cinnamon).
Cauliflower I buy a bit more often but not excessively often either. The green leaves and stems are also good to eat. So don't throw them away. Cauliflower cooked with some nutmeg on top is how we used to eat it at home. I also like to eat it with a yellow curry sauce or with a cheese sauce. Cauliflower cooked soft (or steamed) is much tastier and easier to digest.
I also like sauerkraut raw, straight from the barrel. I don't rinse it first. Many do before boiling it and mashing it with some black pepper balls. But if sauerkraut is not sour, can't you just as well eat ordinary cabbage?
People used to say that children were born into their favourite food. With me then, that would be farmer's cabbage. So I was found in the farmer's cabbage (no, not brought by the stork). Farmer's cabbage I hardly ever eat anymore. I don't see it very often.
When it comes to stew, you can also make a tasty winter stew from Brussels sprouts, cauliflower leaves, carrots + onions and cooked or raw endive with boiled potatoes.
A plus for cabbage is it can be saved for a long time.
source boerenkool translated farmer's cabbage
See @team-ccc for the contest if you like to share your C