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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query cabbage. Sort by date Show all posts
I am a huge fan of cabbage. Along with potatoes it is one of my favorite vegetables. I especially love fried cabbage. This recipe for Indian Spiced Cabbage is especially tasty and a recipe I posted several years back.
Good things bear repeating however, and I felt this was worthy of another look.
The original recipe comes from my Big Blue Binder. I believe I copied it from an old community cookbook from Nova Scotia that I took out of the library many years ago. It might have been called Nova Scotia Pot Luck, but I can't be really certain of it.
I don't know who it is accredited to originally, but I can assure you that it is a really delicious way to prepare cabbage.
It uses fairly simple ingredients that most people have in their homes, with the exception of the Garam Masala. I am fairly certain, however, that if you don't have the Garam Masala in your home, you would have at least the ingredients to make your own.
Garam Masala is deliciously aromatic mix of spices used to bring flavor and warmth to many Indian dishes. If you are a person who loves curries, you will be sure to use it up. I have included below the recipe and instructions to make your own. The spices themselves smell heavenly when they are toasting, and it is very simple make.
One thing that I learned living in the UK was that it was not worth buying a ready made Garam Masala. It is much, much better to make your own, and if you have a spice/coffee grinder, it really makes short work of the whole process.
Author: Marie Rayner
Garam Masala
prep time: 3 minscook time: 3 minstotal time: 6 mins
An Indian Spice mix for use in East Indian cookery.
ingredients:
2 TBS coriander seed
1 TBS cumin seed
2 tsp black peppercorn
1/2 cinnamon stick (or 2 tsp ground cinnamon)
1/2 tsp cardamon seeds (from about 20 cardamom pods)
1 tsp fennel seed
1/2 tsp whole cloves
2 dried bay leaves
instructions:
Toasting the seeds is the secret to a well flavoured Garam Masala. Don't
be tempted to skip this step. Toast the whole spices in a dry frying
pan until they are very fragrant and a shade or two darker. Tip into a
spice grinder and grind to a powder. Alternately you can use a pestle
and mortar. (Labour intensive but it works) Store in an airtight
container in a dark place for up to six months.
be tempted to skip this step. Toast the whole spices in a dry frying
pan until they are very fragrant and a shade or two darker. Tip into a
spice grinder and grind to a powder. Alternately you can use a pestle
and mortar. (Labour intensive but it works) Store in an airtight
container in a dark place for up to six months.
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This dish is also very easy to make. It is easy, spicy and chock full of delicious flavors. The hardest and most labor intensive part is the shredding of the cabbage. I always like to do this by hand. If you have a good sharp knife it won't take very long.
I like to use white cabbage for this recipe rather than any other kind. It lends itself beautifully to the long cook time and I really love the melting, almost buttery texture of it when it has finished cooking.
You can use whatever cabbage you prefer, however I cannot speak for the end result. I have only ever used the bullet hard white cabbage for this.
White cabbage is one of the most common ones in the shops and readily available everywhere. Its just ordinary every day cabbage.
It makes a great Indian side dish when you are cooking an Indian meal. You can make it ahead of time and just heat it up at the last minute.
Leftovers are lovely stirred through cooked rice and reheated. (Just saying.) And I am not going to tell you how I know this, but . . . it makes a darned delicious egg roll filler. Indian egg rolls. Very delicious!
You can also turn this into a heartier dish by adding cubed potato and peas to it.
It also goes very well with soft fluffy Naan breads or Chapati.
Interestingly enough, I have found it to also be a very popular dish at a covered dish or pot luck supper. Everyone seems to love it, and I always come home with an empty dish.
I am not sure how authentically Indian it is. I am no expert at that. It is probably not very, but that doesn't really matter as it is fabulously tasty!
One thing I will miss about the UK are the fabulous curries that were available. I guess I will just have to get better at making my own at home. Of course I will have to wait until I am in my own place because I don't think my father will be touching curry with a ten foot pole!
Its a shame really because he doesn't know what he is missing. I adore curries of any kind, so long as they are not overly hot and spicy. I was never quite able to get into a Masala or a Vindaloo! I don't like food that bites back really.
Anyways, this is nicely spiced, not too hot and incredibly delicious. If you are used to eating Southern style fried cabbage with bacon, maybe its time you stretched things a bit and tried something new! I think you may come to love this just as much!
Yield: 4 - 6Author: Marie Rayner
Indian Spiced Cabbage
prep time: 10 minscook time: 2 hourtotal time: 2 hours and 10 mins
A deliciously spiced side dish with East Indian flavours. I could eat a whole bowlful of this and nothing else.
ingredients:
1 medium head green cabbage, shredded finely
1/3 tsp cumin seeds
2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp ground turmeric
2 tsp mild chili powder
2 tsp garam masala (store bought or make your own, preferable)
2 tsp black pepper
sunflower oil
instructions:
In a large pot,heat oil to cover the bottom (1/4
inch deep) until it begins to shimmer. Add the cumin seeds and cook for
about 30 seconds until it begins to pop and smell fragrant. Add the
remaining spices, seasonings and the cabbage, tossing to coat the
cabbage in the spice/oil mixture. Cover and cook gently, over very low
heat, for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until the cabbage is meltingly tender. Serve
hot.
inch deep) until it begins to shimmer. Add the cumin seeds and cook for
about 30 seconds until it begins to pop and smell fragrant. Add the
remaining spices, seasonings and the cabbage, tossing to coat the
cabbage in the spice/oil mixture. Cover and cook gently, over very low
heat, for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until the cabbage is meltingly tender. Serve
hot.
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This is so very good you just may want to double the recipe. I often do and I can tell you its always always been gobbled up. No leftovers per se.
I hope you will try it and enjoy it as much as we do! Bon Appetit!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
I have been making this stuffed cabbage roll recipe which I am sharing with you today for years, and years and years. In my opinion it is the absolute best, and I don't make that boast lightly.
The original recipe came from a community cookbook put out by my church ladies's guild back in the early 1980's. I really love community cookbooks. People tend to put into them their very best recipes and tried and trues.
Not all of the recipes will be to everyone's taste. Taste is subjective after all.You can be pretty sure that all of the recipes will be the donater's best and most favourite recipes however.
This makes community cookbooks a wise choice when it comes to finding economical, family friendly and delicious recipes. At least that has been my experience.
My mother used to make cabbage rolls often when I was growing up. They were one of my father's favourite things. My father loved anything with hamburger in it. Mom would always make a HUGE pot of them, with enough to freeze for another time.
She did not use rice in hers. Her meat mixture was more like a meatloaf mixture and she would roll it up in the leaves of cabbage, putting them into a very large saucepan. Over that she would pour a few cans of stewed tomatoes.
She also added peeled potatoes and peeled carrots, cut into chunks. I have never seen anyone else make cabbage rolls in this way. When they were done, there was a full meal prepared. No need to add anything else.
I was not fond of the meat filling, I confess, but I did really love the cabbage, carrots and potatoes. My father really loved the meat, but was not fond of the cabbage. I would trade him my meat for his cabbage. Nobody felt cheated in the least.
This recipe is worlds apart from my mother's recipe. First of all the rolls are baked, not simmered on top of the stove and there are no vegetables added. Just the rolls. I also don't use canned tomatoes, preferring instead to make a sauce from a few simple ingredients. Just tastier, in my opinion.
My meat mixture does include rice, unlike hers. I always use raw rice and you needn't worry about it cooking. It does every time and perfectly.
The meat filling also includes some special seasonings aside from salt and pepper. Grated onion, garlic, and carrot to keep things moist. I also add an egg to hold everything together along with a quantity of chopped streaky bacon.
You would be surprised at how much flavour the bacon lends to the mixture. Its not enough to overpower the meat, but it does give a nice smoky flavour. If you want you can put it through a meat grinder. Raw bacon can be rather difficult to chop.
I also like to use a good dry cure streaky bacon. There is less water in dry cured bacon.
I always use a large white/green cabbage, never a savoy cabbage. I think it has the best flavor and texture for this use.
I use a large one because the leaves are much larger and are the perfect size to completely wrap and enclose the meat filling. I also wilt them first in some boiling water for ease of wrapping.
If you trim the thick vein in each leaf you will find that it is much easier to fold the leaves. Just take a sharp knife and pare it down so that it is the same thickness as the rest of the leaf.
Mom never wilted her cabbage first, but it really does make rolling them a lot easier. You can save the inside of the cabbage for other things. Don't worry it will all get used.
The star of this wonderful cabbage roll recipe has always been the sauce. It is incredibly delicious. So delicious that I often double it because we love it so much.
It uses a canned tomato sauce, fresh lemon juice and brown sugar. If you are in the UK, tomato sauce is NOT ketchup! It is what you call Passatta. Seived tomatoes, but a bit thinner. You can add a bit of water to thin it out if you want but it should be fine just as it is.
Make sure you use fresh lemon juice. It has a much better flavour than lemon juice made from concentrate and is not so acidic. It adds a lovely punch to the sauce.
In my younger years I used to always make a big pan of these if we were invited to a pot luck lunch or supper. I always came home with an empty pan and many requests for the recipe. They really are that good!
I like to serve them with some steamed rice on the side and a vegetable if I can. You can serve them with whatever you wish to use and which you enjoy eating with them. Boiled potatoes are also very nice.
These really are the BEST cabbage rolls and worth every ounce of effort to make. You can double or triple the recipe with ease and you may want to do just that as they do freeze very well and it never hurts to have something like these in the freezer that you can just pull out.
You can pay upwards of $20 in the store for a large pan of ready made frozen cabbage rolls, whereas it will only cost you a fraction of that to make your own at home and they really do taste so much better!
This is the season for comfort foods such as these. Why not bake up some comfort for your family today! They will be ever so pleased and grateful that you did! Trust me on this!
Best Cabbage Rolls
Yield: 4 (12 rolls)
Author: Marie Rayner
prep time: 15 Mincook time: 1 H & 20 Mtotal time: 1 H & 35 M
This is our favourite cabbage roll recipe. Delicious, moist and meaty with a fabulous sweet and sour sauce. These always go down a real treat. I often double and triple the recipe when I take them to pot luck suppers. I always bring home an empty dish.
Ingredients
For the rolls:
- 1 pound (455g) extra lean minced beef
- 1/4 cup (55g)raw long grain rice
- 1 large free-range egg, beaten
- 1 medium onion, peeled and grated
- 1 carrot, peeled and grated
- 1 fat clove of garlic, peeled and crushed
- 1 tsp salt
- 1/2 tsp freshly ground black pepper
- 1/2 pound ( 225g) smoked streaky bacon, minced (dry cure if possible)
- 12 wilted cabbage leaves, thick veins trimmed to thin
For the sauce:
- 1/2 cup (100g) soft light brown sugar, packed
- 1/4 cup (60ml) fresh lemon juice
- 1 cup (240ml) tomato sauce (passata)
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Butter a shallow baking dish large enough to hold your rolls. Set aside.
- Place the meat into a bowl and mix together with the raw rice, egg, onion, carrot, garlic, salt, pepper and bacon. Mix well together. Shape into 12 equal sized ovals.
- Place each oval at the wide end of a wilted cabbage leaf. Roll up, tucking in the sides to completely encase the meat.
- Place, folded side down, into a greased baking dish.
- Mix together the brown sugar, lemon juice and tomato sauce. Pour this sauce over the rolls. Cover tightly with a lid or a thick sheet of aluminimum foil.
- Place the casserole into the heated oven and bake for 1 hour. Uncover at the end of that time and bake for 20 minutes longer. Serve hot with your favourite sides.
notes:
I often double the sauce as it is so delicious. Simply multiply all of the sauce ingredients by 2.
Did you make this recipe?
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Created using The Recipes Generator
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan at aol dot com Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again!
This is an old, old recipe copied into my Big Blue Binder from an old community cookbook from back home in Nova Scotia. I don't know who it is accredited to originally, only that it is a delicious way to prepare cabbage.
It uses fairly simple ingredients that most people have in their homes, with the exception of the Garam Masala, but I am fairly certain that if you don't have the Garam Masala in your home, you would have at least the ingredients to make your own. Garam Masala is deliciously aromatic mix of spices used to bring flavour and warmth to many Indian dishes, so no worries about making it as if you are a person who loves curries, you are sure to use it up. I have included below the recipe and instructions to make your own. The spices themselves smell heavenly when they are toasting. Its a very simple make.
Author: Marie Rayner
Garam Masala
prep time: 3 minscook time: 3 minstotal time: 6 mins
An Indian Spice mix for use in East Indian cookery.
ingredients:
2 TBS coriander seed
1 TBS cumin seed
2 tsp black peppercorn
1/2 cinnamon stick (or 2 tsp ground cinnamon)
1/2 tsp cardamon seeds (from about 20 cardamom pods)
1 tsp fennel seed
1/2 tsp whole cloves
2 dried bay leaves
instructions:
Toasting the seeds is the secret to a well flavoured Garam Masala. Don't
be tempted to skip this step. Toast the whole spices in a dry frying
pan until they are very fragrant and a shade or two darker. Tip into a
spice grinder and grind to a powder. Alternately you can use a pestle
and mortar. (Labour intensive but it works) Store in an airtight
container in a dark place for up to six months.
be tempted to skip this step. Toast the whole spices in a dry frying
pan until they are very fragrant and a shade or two darker. Tip into a
spice grinder and grind to a powder. Alternately you can use a pestle
and mortar. (Labour intensive but it works) Store in an airtight
container in a dark place for up to six months.
Created using The Recipes Generator
So is this dish. The hardest and most labour intensive part is the shredding of the cabbage. I like to use white cabbage for this as it lends itself beautifully to the long cook time and I prefer the melting, almost buttery texture of it when it is done.
You can use whatever cabbage you prefer however I cannot speak for the results as I have only ever used hard white cabbage, which I believe is one of the most common ones in the shops and readily available everywhere.
It makes a great Indian side dish when you are cooking an Indian meal. You can make it ahead of time and just heat it up at the last minute. Leftovers are lovely stirred through cooked rice and reheated. (Just saying.)
I have found it to also be a very popular dish at a covered dish or pot luck supper. Amazingly (or maybe not amazingly) everyone seems to love it.
I am not sure how authentically Indian it is, probably not very, but that doesn't really matter as it is fabulously tasty!
It is also delicious mixed into leftover fried potatoes. (Again just saying.)
Yield: 4 - 6Author: Marie Rayner
Indian Spiced Cabbage
prep time: 10 minscook time: 2 hourtotal time: 2 hours and 10 mins
A deliciously spiced side dish with East Indian flavours. I could eat a whole bowlful of this and nothing else.
ingredients:
1 medium head green cabbage, shredded finely
1/3 tsp cumin seeds
2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp ground turmeric
2 tsp mild chili powder
2 tsp garam masala (store bought or make your own, preferable)
2 tsp black pepper
sunflower oil
instructions:
In a large pot,heat oil to cover the bottom (1/4
inch deep) until it begins to shimmer. Add the cumin seeds and cook for
about 30 seconds until it begins to pop and smell fragrant. Add the
remaining spices, seasonings and the cabbage, tossing to coat the
cabbage in the spice/oil mixture. Cover and cook gently, over very low
heat, for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until the cabbage is meltingly tender. Serve
hot.
inch deep) until it begins to shimmer. Add the cumin seeds and cook for
about 30 seconds until it begins to pop and smell fragrant. Add the
remaining spices, seasonings and the cabbage, tossing to coat the
cabbage in the spice/oil mixture. Cover and cook gently, over very low
heat, for 1 1/2 to 2 hours, until the cabbage is meltingly tender. Serve
hot.
Created using The Recipes Generator
I cooked only half a recipe today and found myself wondering why I had not cooked the whole cabbage, its just so very, very good. I hope you will try it and enjoy it as much as we do! Bon Appetit!
I think cabbage has to be one of my favourite vegetables. I love it raw. I love it steamed. I love it fried.
I love it roasted . . . all are very tasty, or at least they are to me, and this recipe here today is one of my favourites.

Delicious wedges of cabbage . . . roasted in the oven until they are crispy tender . . . and gilded on the edges . . .
Napped with a delicious mustard, cheese and dill sauce for serving . . . rich . . . delicious.
I used skim milk to cut down on the fat content . . . and Parmesan cheese. The thing about Parmesan is that you don't have to use a lot of it to get it's flavour effect . . .
A little bit goes a very long way, which is great! Dijon mustard adds a bit of kick and the dill is a nice touch. Dill and cabbage go together like peas and carrots!
I could eat just a plate of this on it's own, but it does make a great side dish for most things. This is one of those times where the side dish will be the star!
*Dill and Mustard Sauced Roasted Cabbage*
Serves 4
1 TBS Dijon mustard
1/2 tsp dill weed
225ml of milk (1 cup)
2 TBS finely grated Parmesan Cheese
salt and black pepper to taste
Bon Appetit!
We were cleaning out the freezer at the weekend and I found a nice piece of salt beef that was in danger of having been in there for far too long, so what's a gal to do. I thawed it out and cooked it. I know it's not St Patrick's Day or even close to it . . . but in all honesty I can eat salt or corned beef anytime! And of course the tastiest go with it side dish has to be cabbage!
I picked up a red cabbage really cheap at the store the other day. It was marked as a second. I don't know why as there didn't appear to be anything wrong with it, but it was roughly half the price of the ordinary ones. I don't mind seconds in most things . . . and certainly not in a cabbage which I am going to braise.
I had been craving braised red cabbage for a while and thought to have it with some pan grilled sausages and mashed potatoes. A dinner which would please the Toddster to no end!
This recipe is a culmination of years of testing and trying a variety of braised red cabbage recipes. I have tried a lot of different ones through the years and this recipe here today is the end result of taking the best bits of each and what worked out the best for me.
The end result is a delicious side dish which is neither too sweet, nor too sour . . . and lightly spiced with a bit of cinnamon, cloves and freshly grated nutmeg. I like to use brown sugar for that slight molasses quality it lends . . .
I'm also rather lazy when it comes to cooking and I have managed to cut out any pre-wilting of the cabbage. You simply just cut up your cabbage, onions and apples and layer them in a casserole dish. The spiced and sweetened vinegar gets poured over top and then the whole thing is baked under a tight cover in a slow oven for a few hours, with the end result being some of the best braised red cabbage you could ever want to eat. If it's not . . . I'll eat my apron! (I don't wear a hat!)
*Braised Red Cabbage and Apple*
Makes 6 servings
Printable Recipe
A delicious side dish which goes very well with pork, duck, goose, turkey and venison. Very simple to make. You just combine all of the ingredients and bake in a tightly covered casserole dish.
1 small head of red cabbage, trimmed, cored and thinly shredded with a sharp knife
(Don't grate it. You want thin strands.)
1 medium onion, peeled and finely chopped
1 large Granny Smith apple, peeled and chopped
4 TBS butter
1 TBS soft light brown sugar, packed
1 tsp coarse salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
1 heaped dessert spoon of red currant jelly
80ml of water (1/3 cup)
80ml of distilled white vinegar (1/3 cup)
Melt the butter. Whisk in the sugar, water, spices, jelly and vinegar. Bring to the boil to dissolve sugar and jelly. Set aside.
Preheat the oven to 160*C/325*F/ gas mark 3.
Layer the cabbage, onion and apple in a large casserole dish. Pour the hot mixture of spiced vinegar over top. Cover tightly. Roast in the heated oven for one and 3/4 hour to two hours, until the cabbage is wilted and very tender. Serve warm. Any leftovers can be gently reheated or frozen for future use.
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