I was asked the other day how to cook cabbage. Cabbage is one of those
vegetables that we just love in this house, but it is a very easily
maligned vegetable, mostly because a lot of people cook it rather
horribly. There is nothing more appealing than a plate of ather
insipid and stinky overcooked boiled cabbage. Blah. Blah. Blah.
Fresh cabbage, lightly cooked, is full of goodness, packed with
vitamins, minerals and flavour and it’s not expensive or boring in the
least.
Cabbage should always be eaten as fresh as possible – it loses nutrients
if stored for too long. An unwrapped fresh cabbage should look bright
and crisp, with its outer leaves intact (often if it’s had its outer
leaves removed, it was because they were limp, which is not a good
sign). The centre should feel firm and the leaves should squeak as you
pull them apart. You will want to get rid of any discoloured or wimply
outer leaves and then cut the cabbage into quarters. Remove and
discard the core and then cut the cabbage crosswise into thin strips,
about 1/3 inch in width, with a sharp knife. The secret to cooking
cabbage is to cook it briefly in rapidly
boiling water. I like to pack it down quite tightly into a saucepan,
sprinkle with some fine sea salt. I then place the pan over a high
heat, adding boiling water from the kettle. This comes back to the boil
almost instantly. I then time it for 3 to 5 minutes. It is done when
you can bite a piece and is just yields, much like cooking pasta. Drain
it immediately in a large colander, tossing and pressing it lightly to
extract as much water as possible from it. I use a bread and butter
plate for this. I cut down into the cabbage with the edge of the plate
which chops it lightly. You can then dress it with a bit of butter,
some salt and pepper and serve it while it is nice and hot. Delicious!
I think the old school method of cooking most vegetables was to cook
them pretty much to death for some reason. I have some very old
cookbooks which recommend cooking carrots for 45 minutes, for instance.
Absolutely all of the nutritional value would pretty much be boiled out
by that time I would think! I wouldn't want to eat a carrot which had
been boiled for that long. Neither would I want them rock hard. It is
the same with most vegetables. There is a very fine line between them
being overdone or underdone, but with a bit of practice anyone can get
it right. You can find an excellent chart with cooking times
here.
I am just about to harvest my very first cabbages. I will be making sauerkraut with most of them as it is easier for me to digest. I will also use your method above as the kids love cabbage. I remember once lightly frying the strips in a little soy and they loved that too. We visit a lady in a nursing home and they are used to having their veggies over cooked so that's how the chef cooks for them. The beans don't even look green anymore.
ReplyDeleteKylie
Over cooked vegetables are so unpalatable Kylie. I hope that when I get old I don't like mine like that! I adore sauerkraut. My sister makes her own. I need to get with the program and make some too. We also love it fried. Its soooo good! I always put some in my fried rice as well! xo
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