Hi ES335!
I think, we can consider a cylinder as bluff body, can we?
At some moment, in a turbulent flow, there an universe of eddies, which can be characterized statistically, for instance, getting the spectral distribuition (FFT, Fast Fourier Transforms) of the velocity fluctuations, where you can identify the fundamental and the harmonic frequencies, as it was said by some earlier post, perhaps in other terms.
A big eddy happens, because a singular event occurred, somewhere in the flow, or at nearby of a surface/body element, as your cylinder. And if the flow was initially laminar, it can go through a transition phenomena, and finally, we have the turbulent flow with large eddies.
The similarity analises gives you The Strouhal Number, a dimensionless frequency, which is function of Reynolds Number. It means the frequency at which the vortices are shed into a Karman vortex street, behind a circular cylinder. You can read this in fundamental book, as "Boundary Layer Theory" by Hermann Schlichting.
Concerning the structure of the turbulent flow, this story is above all an energy process, an energy transfer with the large eddy scales develloping to the small scales again. It is a dynamic process, what we call strectching process. About the vorticity... I think you must read Tennekes or Bradshaw classic books on TURBULENCE issues. Just to re-enforce fundamental concepts.
I hope this can be some help.
Cheers.
zzzo