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Showing posts sorted by relevance for query cabbage. Sort by date Show all posts
One of my favorite vegetables has always been cabbage. I love it in any way shape or form. I could eat it every day, and sometimes do. My cats even enjoy it, which I think is kind of strange, but oh well! (I only let them have it in small amounts, just in case.)
When I was a child it was something that my mother only ever very rarely cooked, mostly because my father was not fond of cabbage. He did however like it when my mom made cabbage rolls. He enjoyed the flavor that the cabbage imparted to the meat.
I, however, was not fond of the meat so we had a deal between us. I would give him my meat if he gave me his cabbage. Everybody was happy.
This recipe I am sharing with you today is a small batch version of a recipe for Kielbasa Cabbage Skillet that I have adapted from a book by Christy Denney, entitled Scrumptious. And I can tell you, this is a very scrumptious recipe! (And that is one very scrumptious book!)
This recipe may not be a looker, but I can promise you that what it may be lacking in the looks department, it more than makes up for in the taste department.
Not only is it delicious, but it is low carb, low GI and diabetic friendly too! Its also very quick and easy to make!
It goes together in a flash and uses very simple every day ingredients as well. It is one of my favorite things to make.
Of course if you are a heartier eater and are not bothered by carbs, you can add cooked noodles, potatoes, rice or pierogis to the mix! All are very tasty additions.
WHAT YOU NEED TO MAKE KIELBASA CABBAGE SKILLET
Simple everyday ordinary ingredients. If you are like me you probably have just about everything in your kitchen right now to make it! If not, its a quick trip to the shops!
- 1 TBS light olive oil
- 1 small brown onion, peeled and diced
- 2 small cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
- 1 TBS white wine vinegar
- 7 ounces (200g) kielbasa, thinly sliced (smoked sausage)
- 1 TBS butter
- 1 1/2 tsp Dijon mustard
- 1/2 head green cabbage, cored and thinly sliced
- 1/4 tsp paprika
- pinch red pepper flakes
- salt and black pepper to taste
I like to use light olive oil. I think it is a waste to use extra virgin olive oil in cooking, when the light oil is much better suited to it and works perfectly well. Save your extra virgin for salads or dipping!
I used a white cabbage, or winter cabbage as it is also known. It is pretty much the only cabbage I have seen here in my local area.
I really miss the cabbages of the U.K. There were so many varieties of cabbage to choose from, Savoy, Winter King, White, Sweetheart, Red, Cavolo Nero, etc. That was probably one of the benefits from living so close to continental Europe.
Here most of what we get comes from the U.S. or Mexico.
I like to skin my Kielbasa. Personally I find the skins a little bit too tough. In the UK you can use smoked sausage, and the smoked sausage you get in the U.K. will not need to be skinned.
The original recipe called for white vinegar, but I had some white wine vinegar and thought to myself why not give it an additional bit flair, and so I used that. If all you have is white vinegar, then just use that.
Don't leave out either the vinegar or the Dijon mustard. Both give this dish a unique and delicious flavor. You won't want to miss out on that, plus they smell fabulous while this dish is cooking.
Your onion may get a bit caramelized, but that's okay. Just don't let it burn.
HOW TO MAKE KIELBASA CABBAGE SKILLET
I know I say this all the time, but really this could not be simpler to make. Quick, easy, delicious.
Heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion and sauté without coloring for 4 to 6 minutes until soft. Add the garlic and cook for a further 30 seconds or so until fragrant.
Stir in the sliced kielbasa and the white wine vinegar. Cook for 4 to 6 minutes until lightly browned.
Add the butter, Dijon mustard and sliced cabbage. Cook, stirring frequently, until the cabbage gets tender. Between 5 and 10 minutes.
Season to taste with salt and pepper, the paprika and red pepper flakes. Serve immediately.
I really enjoyed this with the slight tang and bit of heat from the vinegar, mustard and red pepper flakes. I also enjoyed the smokiness from the sausage and that tiny bit of saltiness.
The cabbage was crispy tender and altogether this was a delicious combination of flavors and textures that was just plain, really nice!
Some other cabbage recipes here on The English Kitchen that you might enjoy are:
ROAST CABBAGE WITH DILL & MUSTARD SAUCE - Delicious wedges of cabbage are roasted in the oven until they are crispy tender, gilded golden brown on the edges, the insides meltingly tender. On its own this would be more than enough, but napped with a rich dill, mustard and cheese sauce for serving, well. What can I say? Incredibly rich and fabulously tasty. Delicious . . rich . . . delectable and quite distinctive!!
CABBAGE WITH PANCETTA AND CREAM - For this dish the cabbage is quickly blanched, sliced and then stirred together with some sauteed pancetta with it's lovely salt and pepper flavours, beautifully herby Sage . . . and rich cream. Each ingredient bringing out the very best of this beautifully humble vegetable.
Yield: 3
Author: Marie Rayner
Kielbasa Cabbage Skillet
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 25 MinTotal time: 35 Min
This may not be very pretty to look at, but what it lacks in appearance, it more than makes up for in taste and ease of preparation. Low carb as well, which makes it diabetic friendly.
Ingredients
- 1 TBS light olive oil
- 1 small brown onion, peeled and diced
- 2 small cloves of garlic, peeled and minced
- 1 TBS white wine vinegar
- 7 ounces (200g) kielbasa, thinly sliced (smoked sausage)
- 1 TBS butter
- 1 1/2 tsp Dijon mustard
- 1/2 head green cabbage, cored and thinly sliced
- 1/4 tsp paprika
- pinch red pepper flakes
- salt and black pepper to taste
Instructions
- Heat the olive oil in a skillet over medium-high heat. Add the onion and sauté without coloring for 4 to 6 minutes until soft. Add the garlic and cook for a further 30 seconds or so until fragrant.
- Stir in the sliced kielbasa and the white wine vinegar. Cook for 4 to 6 minutes until lightly browned.
- Add the butter, Dijon mustard and sliced cabbage. Cook, stirring frequently, until the cabbage gets tender. Between 5 and 10 minutes.
- Season to taste with salt and pepper, the paprika and red pepper flakes. Serve immediately.
Did you make this recipe?
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I love winter food . . . comfort food, warming and filling. Indoor food. Foods like earthy root vegetables and potatoes . . . leeks and cabbage.
Cabbage is a real favourite around here, and I'm not picky about the variety either. I love all types, although in all honesty I really had only ever eaten red or white cabbage prior to moving here to the UK.
I was incredibly naieve as to the many delicious varieties of this fabulous member of the Brassica family.
We just adore red cabbage, gently spiced . . . sweet and sour almost . . . it's absolutely lovely with pork and turkey . . . another favourite meal of ours is simply sauteed white cabbage stirred together with rice or noodles.

We just adore red cabbage, gently spiced . . . sweet and sour almost . . . it's absolutely lovely with pork and turkey . . . another favourite meal of ours is simply sauteed white cabbage stirred together with rice or noodles.
Simply fabulous. You can't get much better than that.
Sauteed, boiled . . . pickled, steamed . . . stewed and even raw. Cabbage is a favourite winter food in the Rayner household, full stop.

Most people make the mistake of overcooking their cabbage, and don't get me wrong . . . there is a perfect time for that . . . think stuffed cabbage here, or baked with sausage, Trou style.
In a dish like that you want the cabbage meltingly soft . . . almost butter soft . . . but you would never use a Savoy for that . . . only a green or a white.
This recipe is the perfect way to showcase the brilliant green and earthy, jewel-like Savoy variety.
Quickly blanched, sliced and then stirred together with some sauteed pancetta with it's lovely salt and pepper flavours, beautifully herby Sage . . . and rich cream.
Each ingredient bringing out the very best of this beautifully humble vegetable.
I could eat a whole plate of nothing but this . . . but it does go particularly well with roasted chicken and potatoes.
Do cook extra potatoes so that you can enjoy the leftovers of both the cabbage the potatoes stirred together and fried in butter for a simple hash the next day.
Delicious.
Delicious.

*Cabbage with Pancetta and Cream*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Cabbage and bacon are a marriage made in heaven . . . add some cream and you have bliss. Perfect side dish for roast chicken and potatoes.
1 large bay leaf
1 savoy cabbage (about 3 pounds)
2 TBS unsalted butter
1 TBS extra virgin olive oil
100g chopped pancetta (about 1/2 cup)
half a dozen sage leaves, thinly sliced
4 TBS creme fraiche or double cream
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Bring a large saucepan of lightly salted water to the boil. Add the bay leaf, broken in half. Cut the cabbage into quarters and blanch it in the boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes. Drain well and set aside. Allow to cool until you can touch it with your hands. Cut out the cores and discard. Cut the remainder of the cabbage into thick slices, crosswise.
Heat the butter and olive oil together in a large skillet. Once the butter begins to foam add the pancetta and sage. Cook and stir over high heat for about a minute. Add the cabbage along with some salt and cook, stirring occasionally for several minutes, until heated through. Add the cream and heat through, stirring to combine completely. Season to taste with some more salt and freshly ground black pepper. Serve immediately.
I love winter food . . . comfort food, warming and filling. Indoor food. Foods like earthy root vegetables and potatoes . . . leeks and cabbage.

Sauteed, boiled . . . pickled, steamed . . . stewed and even raw.

Most people make the mistake of overcooking their cabbage, and don't get me wrong . . . there is a perfect time for that . . . think stuffed cabbage here, or baked with sausage, Trou style.
This recipe is the perfect way to showcase the brilliant green and earthy, jewel-like Savoy variety.
I could eat a whole plate of nothing but this . . . but it does go particularly well with roasted chicken and potatoes.

*Cabbage with Pancetta and Cream*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Cabbage and bacon are a marriage made in heaven . . . add some cream and you have bliss. Perfect side dish for roast chicken and potatoes.
1 large bay leaf
1 savoy cabbage (about 3 pounds)
2 TBS unsalted butter
1 TBS extra virgin olive oil
100g chopped pancetta (about 1/2 cup)
half a dozen sage leaves, thinly sliced
4 TBS creme fraiche or double cream
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Bring a large saucepan of lightly salted water to the boil. Add the bay leaf, broken in half. Cut the cabbage into quarters and blanch it in the boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes. Drain well and set aside. Allow to cool until you can touch it with your hands. Cut out the cores and discard. Cut the remainder of the cabbage into thick slices, crosswise.
Heat the butter and olive oil together in a large skillet. Once the butter begins to foam add the pancetta and sage. Cook and stir over high heat for about a minute. Add the cabbage along with some salt and cook, stirring occasionally for several minutes, until heated through. Add the cream and heat through, stirring to combine completely. Season to taste with some more salt and freshly ground black pepper. Serve immediately.
Cabbage is a real favourite around here, and I'm not picky about the variety either. I love all types.
We just adore red cabbage, gently spiced . . . sweet and sour almost . . . it's absolutely lovely with pork and turkey . . .
Another favourite meal of ours is simply sauteed white cabbage stirred together with rice or noodles. Simply fabulous. You can't get much better than that.
Sauteed, boiled . . . pickled, steamed . . . stewed and even raw.
Cabbage is a favourite winter food in the Rayner household, full stop.
Most people make the mistake of overcooking their cabbage, and don't get me wrong . . . there is a perfect time for that . . . think stuffed cabbage here, or baked with sausage, Trou style.
In a dish like that you want the cabbage meltingly soft . . . almost butter soft . . . but you would never use a Savoy for that . . . only a green or a white.
This recipe is the perfect way to showcase the brilliant green and earthy, jewel-like Savoy variety.
Quickly blanched, sliced and then stirred together with some sauteed pancetta with it's lovely salt and pepper flavours, beautifully herby Sage . . . and rich cream. Each ingredient bringing out the very best of this beautifully humble vegetable.
I could eat a whole plate of nothing but this . . . but it does go particularly well with roasted chicken and potatoes.
Do cook extra potatoes so that you can enjoy the leftovers of both the cabbage the potatoes stirred together and fried in butter for a simple hash the next day.
Delicious.
Delicious.
*Cabbage with Pancetta and Cream*
Serves 4
Printable Recipe
Cabbage and bacon are a marriage made in heaven . . . add some cream and you have bliss. Perfect side dish for roast chicken and potatoes.
1 large bay leaf
1 savoy cabbage (about 3 pounds)
2 TBS unsalted butter
1 TBS extra virgin olive oil
100g chopped pancetta (about 1/2 cup)
half a dozen sage leaves, thinly sliced
4 TBS creme fraiche or double cream
fine sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
Bring a large saucepan of lightly salted water to the boil. Add the bay leaf, broken in half. Cut the cabbage into quarters and blanch it in the boiling water for 2 to 3 minutes. Drain well and set aside. Allow to cool until you can touch it with your hands. Cut out the cores and discard. Cut the remainder of the cabbage into thick slices, crosswise.
Heat the butter and olive oil together in a large skillet. Once the butter begins to foam add the pancetta and sage. Cook and stir over high heat for about a minute. Add the cabbage along with some salt and cook, stirring occasionally for several minutes, until heated through. Add the cream and heat through, stirring to combine completely. Season to taste with some more salt and freshly ground black pepper. Serve immediately.
It's a cold, wet, rainy day out there today. Not fit for man nor beast. It could always be worse however as it could be snowing.
My brother posted a photo of his backyard on FB this morning and in Ottawa, it was snowing. I am not sure I am ready for that. I haven't even bought myself a snow scraper yet. (Not to self, buy snow scraper.)
This is a comfort food kind of a day. When I think of comfort food, several things come to mind. First, potatoes. Second cabbage. Third onions.
This simple dish of fried cabbage and potatoes has all three of those things. It's quite simply delicious as well. I could eat a whole pan of just this and nothing else and be very, very happy.
I adapted the recipe from one which I found in this cookbook. Written by blogger Parish Ritchie (Life with the Crusts Off) I have it on my kindle.
I love church cookbooks. I had several of them, but of course they got left behind. Church potluck suppers are always some of the best functions to attend.
People always tend to bring their very best potluck dishes to church potlucks. They are a point of pride.
The best ones I enjoyed of all time were held in a small country church that I used to attend in French Lake, New Brunswick. The tables in that church basement used to groan under the weight of an abundance of delicious food.
That little Baptist church was filled with lots of "good cookers" as my friend Debbie would say!
You never came away from one of their get-togethers hungry. Dishes just like this one of the many on offer. Along with the companionship and fellowship of some very nice and caring people.
I adore cabbage and I adore potatoes. They are two of my most favorite vegetables. Combine them both and I am in comfort food heaven!
This is a simple side dish that goes well with just about anything. If you are a vegetarian, it makes a delicious main dish, especially if you serve it with a nice square of cornbread on the side!
WHAT DO YOU NEED TO MAKE FRIED CABBAGE AND POTATOES
Very simple ingredients, that's what!
- butter (I use regular butter in most of my cooking)
- onions (just ordinary brown skinned cooking)
- potatoes (any potato will do, peel or not as you prefer)
- cabbage (I used the everyday cabbage or white cabbage as it is known in the UK)
- salt, pepper
- water or chicken stock (note if using stock, you may not need as much salt)
They offer what is called Stew Packs in the shops here. I think they also did the in the UK. I find them to be a great economy.
Included in the pack will be a cabbage, a few turnips or rutabagas, some carrots, an onion or two and some parsnips.
=
All ingredients that I can easily use if not in a stew, then on their own and it always works out a lot cheaper for me to buy them in a pack like this rather than in individual lots.
There is also far less waste for me. As the only resident in my household, it only makes sense to buy things in smaller quantities. These stew packs work perfectly for me.
HOW TO MAKE FRIED CABBAGE AND POTATOES
It's not hard to make really. You need to begin by peeling your potatoes and onion. You don't need to peel the potatoes if you don't want to, but I did.
I cut my onion in half horizontally and then cut it into thin slices crosswise (half-moons). I did the same with my potatoes.
Melt your butter until it begins to foam and add your onions. You need to cook these, stirring occasionally, over a moderate heat until they begin to soften and then throw in your potatoes.
No need to cook the potatoes first. I was a bit surprised at this because I usually cook my potatoes first when I am going to fry them, but today I threw caution to the wind and just went with the flow!
While the potatoes and onions are cooking, prep your cabbage. Cut it in half and then remove the core. Then cut it into thin wedges and chop them across into smaller pieces. Perfectly bite sized.
Once your potatoes have softened and they have started to brown, along with the onions, scoop them out into a bowl using a slotted spoon and set them aside, keeping them warm.
Add the cabbage to the dish, turning to coat it in any pan drippings and add your water or stock. Cover and then just let the cabbage steam until it is beautifully tender.
True confession here, I always add a pinch of sugar when I am cooking cabbage It takes away any bitterness.
Once your cabbage is tender, remove the cover and allow any liquid to evaporate. Season to taste with some salt and black pepper and toss the potatoes and onions back into the pan, carefully combining everything evenly.
Oh my, my, my . . . a quick heat through and your dish is ready to go!
If you are a person who dislikes the smell of cabbage cooking, light a candle. I, personally, do not mind the smell. It is a smell I love.
Anyways, this is true comfort food. Hearty, filling, delicious. You could add bacon to it if you wanted to of scraps of ham, and yes, cornbread goes wonderfully.
Enjoy!!
Fried Cabbage and Potatoes
Yield: 2
Author: Marie Rayner
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 30 MinTotal time: 40 Min
This is a fabulously tasty dish. Simple to make, using simple ingredients. I downsized the original to feed two but if you want to feed four see measurements in brackets.
Ingredients
- 2 TBS butter (4)
- 1 small onion, peeled and thinly sliced (1 medium onion)
- 2 potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced (4 potatoes)
- 1/2 small head of cabbage, cored and chopped (1 full head)
- salt and black pepper to taste
- water or chicken stock
Instructions
- Melt the butter in a skillet over medium high heat until it starts to foam. Add the onions, cook and stir for 5 to 8 minutes. Stir in the potatoes.
- Cook, stirring occasionally, until the potatoes and onions are cooked through and beginning to brown. Remove to a bowl and keep warm.
- Add the cabbage to the skillet. Season with some salt and pepper and add 1/4 cup (60ml) water or chicken stock. Cover and cook until the cabbage is tender (about 20 minutes). Keep an eye on it and stir it every so often.
- Uncover and turn up the heat to evaporate any water/stock which may remain in the pan. Return the onions and potatoes to the pan and toss everything together to combine.
- Heat through. Taste and adjust seasoning as required.
- Serve hot.
Did you make this recipe?
Tag @marierayner5530 on instagram and hashtag it #marierayner5530
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