Recipe Of The Week: Stuffed Cabbage

  • 23 Dec 2016 9:00 AM
Recipe Of The Week:  Stuffed Cabbage
"Probably our stuffed cabbage is originated from szárma, that means the stuffed grape leaves roll, which is originated from the time of the Ottoman (Turkish) occupation.

It was the first time on the Cabbage Festival, when I saw the stuffed cabbage is cooked in bogrács (kettle.)

I guess stuffed cabbage is a well-known and popular savoury food in many parts of Europe and Western Asia, but made differently everywhere. Many years ago (during high school), I spent a summer in Israel where I tasted the kosher variety without smoked pork and sour cream. To be honest, I could never be a kosher because the stuffed cabbage is only good with sour cream and smoke pork :) 

Let’s see the recipe!

Ingredients:

1 Large cabbage
½ kilogram Ground beef or pork
1 1/4 cups Long grain white rice

salt to taste
pepper to taste

Red Hungarian Paprika - for color and taste
3 Large fresh garlic cloves pressed or more if desired
2-3 Eggs
1 Onion - grated into meat mixture
300 gram Smoked Ham hock
1 kilogram Saurkraut - rinse alittle right before adding so it's not too sour.
2 small cans of contadina tomato paste - mix both cans with enough water to cover entire pot of stuffed cabbage for cooking.
Oil and flour for the roux

1. Remove core from the cabbage. Separate the leaves and boil them uncovered for 5 minutes or until soft enough to roll. Dry and reserve liquid.

2. Combine the meat, rice, spices, and eggs, mix well with your hands. Lay out a leaf of cabbage and center about 2 tablespoons of meat. Fold up sides and roll up ends to seal each roll. Continue with all the meat and cabbage.

3. To fill the pot, start with a layer of that chopped up cabbage mixed with sauerkraut. Then place the stuffed cabbage. Add another layer of chopped cabbage and sauerkraut on top of that, then another layer of stuffed cabbage. Keep going like this until you run out of stuffed cabbage, and add a final layer of chopped cabbage and sauerkraut on top.

4. Add the tomato saft, the smoked pork and the water to just cover the contents of the pot. Cook on simmer for one and half hour or until rice is tender.

5. Make a roux. (Ingredients for roux: 1 tablespoon of oil, 1 tablespoon of flour, paprika)

6. Serve with sour cream."

Source: hungarystartshere.com

  • How does this content make you feel?
  • 112-meter Long Hungarian Cake Sets Guinness World Record

    112-meter Long Hungarian Cake Sets Guinness World Record

    • 10 Feb 2025 6:05 AM

    The teachers and confectioner students of the Dobos C. József Vocational School of the Budapest Center of Economic Vocational Training have set a Guinness record by creating a 112-meter cake, reports Turizmus.com.

  • Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Carnival Donut

    Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Carnival Donut

    • 7 Feb 2025 6:51 AM

    "The Carnival donut is my 'Today's recommendation" and its called in Hungarian "Fánk" or "Farsangi Fánk". Farsang means 'Carnival'. Fánk is a typical carnival food in Hungary but we like to eat donut after our several substantial soups for example goulash, palóc soup and bean soup.

  • List of World’s 100 Best Dishes Now Includes a Hungarian Broth

    List of World’s 100 Best Dishes Now Includes a Hungarian Broth

    • 6 Jan 2025 10:50 AM

    International gastronomy website Taste Atlas has made a list of the world’s 100 best dishes at the end of 2024. A famous Hungarian dish, one that is present at almost every household on Sundays, has managed to earn a place in the top 100, reports Drive.hu.

  • Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Palóc Soup

    Hungarian Recipe Of The Week: Palóc Soup

    • 6 Jan 2025 10:48 AM

    Our Palóc Goulash or Palóc Soup, which is similar like our national goulash, but different. It is because palóc goulash consists of more ingredients (for example French beans and sour cream). And originally, it's made of lamb.