Pork, rice, onions and herbs rolled in Savoy cabbage leaves and poached in tomato juice.

I vacuum sealed them individually for the freezer.

14 points

Ashkenazi Jews make this called Stuffed Cabbage with beef, naturally, one of my favorites, deep deep comfort food

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4 points

My mom used to make them but called them golumpki (which apparently is a Polish word for the same thing)

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2 points

I used to go to shabbat dinner at my friend’s house all the time. I don’t think I ever had stuffed cabbage with beef there. I used to make cabbage rolls with beef but I can’t eat beef anymore. This is the first time I tried with pork.

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6 points
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Ukrainian here: Whoever told you this had never been to Ukrainian Christmas dinner. Our cabbage rolls are not covered in tomato sauce. They aren’t supposed to be huge either, you’re supposed to be able to finish them in 1-2 bites comfortably. You don’t make 6 big ass cabbage rolls. You make a pot of 100 little ones.

You’ll get cussed out by someone’s elderly grandma if you bring these to the family dinner.

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2 points

Many of these recipes come from Ukrainian immigrants in North America. The size of the cabbage rolls also vary from region to region.

My mother has a similar recipe to this that was passed down from my great grandmother, that she got from her Ukrainian neighbors in Saskatchewan in the 1920s.

I had a coworker who was second generation Ukrainian-Canadian who has almost the exact same recipe.

These types of cabbage rolls are hard to find because nobody wants to poach them in tomato juice for 6 hours, and the result is tough chewy cabbage. Can’t buy them, can’t find them in any restaurant.

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2 points

Hehehe. Baba is going to be angry?

I like the extra tomato sauce to keep them moist when I reheat them. I’m too fucking lazy to make 100 little ones. I’m Scottish, sorry for the abuse of your national dish!

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1 point

No these look accurate. My mom adds extra tomato juice and cooks them low and slow until the cabbage melts in your mouth and the edges of the pan turn black.

The big issue I have with most cabbage rolls is they put too much emphasis on the filling. The filling doesn’t matter, the spices don’t matter. It’s all about the cabbage. Towards the end of the batch I usually end up scooping out the filling and just eating the cabbage leaves and leftover tomato.

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3 points
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6 points

The Polish side of my family called these halupki. Basically the same, but I think they used ground beef and there was sauerkraut in the sauce.

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4 points

Thanks! I haven’t had any for years because I can’t eat beef. I had always wondered if they could be made with pork but never tried it. I was at a farmers market where a Ukrainian refugee family was selling homemade Ukrainian food and the wind was blowing toward me. I told her I was going to eat one even if it hurt me and she told me they were pork. That sealed it.

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4 points

As a Ukrainian, you can put almost anything into these haha. I have also tried a variation where instead of cabbage it’s stuffed peppers.

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2 points

There’s nothing bad about the filling. You can put it anywhere. The only issue is that I use converted rice which I put in dry then hydrate with the tomato juice. If I used cooked rice I would stuff that stuff into anything.

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1 point

Do you sous vide? That’s perfect for a low power reheat, or cook, for that matter.

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4 points

I do not. We have a chamber vacuum sealer for our farm. I bought 1,000 of those 5x7 bags for making up spice packs. I included a scoop of reduced tomato juice in each one to keep them moist when they are reheated. Authors chamber vacuum dealers you can seal liquid which is really helpful. I can’t eat a lot so one is normally enough. My wife hates them so I make them when she is away and freeze them. I can get away with reheating one or two but the house smells like a giant farted in here when I’m making them.

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2 points

Use the sous vide and cook in them. No scent. I’ve been told that sous vide sticks have multiple uses on farms including controlled warming of reproductive cells, if I read correctly. Ya know, in case you need an extra reason or so.

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2 points

In all honesty I’ve just never gotten around to getting one. It would be very handy for warming these up right in the bag.

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1 point

Do you sous vide? That’s perfect for a low power reheat, or cook, for that matter.

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