Annie’s Stuffed Cabbage Revisited

Yesterday, my plan was to make Annie’s stuffed cabbage. I had all the ingredients. My taste buds were driving me full force until I realized that the green leafy cabbage that I had bought was too small. It would not make enough to fill the pot. How could that be? So instead, I made stuffed cabbage deconstructed. Here’s Annie’s recipe tomorrow, tomorrow I will write about my deconstruction stuffed cabbage rolls.

How to Make Stuffed Cabbage:

Preparing-cabbge

Don’t you love it when you see someone so into what they are doing, that they forget everything else around them? My friend Annie came over to teach me how to make her, Stuffed Cabbage recipe. I never thought I would like Stuffed Cabbage, but after tasting hers the other day I had to eat my words, and go out and find a big, leafy, green cabbage.

Annie told me to buy the biggest cabbage I could find, two bottles of olive oil, four onions, pearl rice, and some tomatoes. She said she would bring the rest.

When Annie saw the cabbage she exclaimed that it was the biggest cabbage she had ever seen. In fact she must have said it a million times, during the course of making stuffed cabbage, “Mon Dieu, what an amazing cabbage!” And like a woman who loves what she is doing, she started to prepare the cabbage without even taking off her hat, nor putting on an apron. Her hands worked worked steadily, I barely had time to record her steps.
Gently tear off the leaves of the cabbage, all the way to the tight core.
Then trim down (but not through) the hard, back, rib on each cabbage leaf (photo above)
Then trim a tiny bit off the top of each leaf.

how to make stuffed cabbage
Cabbage-core
Onions

While Annie was busy preparing the cabbage she gave me instructions on how to make the cabbage stuffing (Farce in French). Peel and puree four, yellow onions. Add the puree onions to a heavy pan.

My eyes were watering badly I could hardly see what I was doing, Annie said, “The next time you peel onions, dip your knife into a glass of water each time you go to use it.”

That is fine and dandy I wanted to say, but since I didn’t know how to say that in French, I pointed out that I pureed the onions with a mixer. “Oh,” she said, ” I didn’t hear it. Wear goggles the next time you do that.”

Add the pureed onions, plus a teaspoon of salt and pepper, to a heavy sauce pan. Then add at least four to six cups of olive oil. I daresay that I questioned Annie as I poured the bottle of olive oil into the pan, “Annie are you sure? Gee, this is a ton of oil?” Annie said, “Am I sure? Sure I am sure!” I stopped at four cups. Annie came over and added at least two more cups of olive oil.

Hence, pureed onions must swim in olive oil.

Chopped-onions
Sautee-onions
Cooking-cabbage

Saute the pureed onions on medium heat, stir often, until golden. While this is going on, add a large pot of water to the stove, to blanch the cabbage leaves. When the onions are golden and somewhat caramelized, add two pounds of pearl rice, continue to stir, saute until golden (about forty-five minutes.) Do not add water. The rice cooks in the olive oil-onion mixture.

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Strainer
Cabbage-blanched

When the water is boiling, add the cabbage leaves one at a time, gently push them down, add up to ten leaves at a time. Blanche the darker ones together, and then the lighter ones together. Do not mix the two, because the darker ones take longer to blanch.

Add ten leaves to the boiling water, the water will stop boiling at this point, when the water starts to re-boil, count five minutes for the darker leaves, and three minutes for the lighter leaves.

After each batch of ten cabbage leaves have cooked take them out and put them into a strainer, then add them to a plate separately to cool off. Cook all the cabbage leaves this way. 

This is why my house did not smell like chocolate. Blanching cabbage has its own perfume.

Babies-born-in-cabbages

“Mon Dieu what an amazing cabbage!”

Homemade-tomato-sauce

When the onion-rice mixture is carmelized, and the rice is nearly cooked (tender with a slight chewy texture,) add four cups of tomato sauce (I used French Husband’s homemade tomato sauce.) and one cup of finely chopped, fresh fennel leaves (Annie gathers fennel leaves in the summer, blanches them, and then freezes them in one cup packets.) stir the tomato and fennel into the carmelized onion rice mixture thoroughly. Cook the tomato sauce and fennel for a few minutes longer.

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Cabbage-pan
Cabbage-broth

Put the cooked cabbage stuffing into a bowl. Take a blanched cabbage leaf, start with the darker green ones first, put the cabbage leaf on the palm of your hand. Take two heaping tablespoons of onion-rice mixture and add it to the middle of the cabbage leaf. Fold one side over, then the other side over, then roll starting with the stem side first, and roll it up. Add the stuffed cabbage leaf to the heavy sauce pan that you used to cook the rice mixture, use it as it -do not clean the pan. Put the stuffed, cabbage rolls in the pan one by one, snug but not to tight. When the pan is full, with at least two inches head room, add three to four cups of the broth water (Use the water that you used to blanch the leaves in.)

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Add a plate on top of the stuffed cabbage rolls, then a lid. I asked Annie why and she said that it gives a tighter seal. 

Cover the pan and bring the stuffed cabbage rolls to a boil. Then turn the burner down as low as it can go and leave it to cook slowly for about forty five minutes to an hour.



Stuffed Cabbage:

One large green cabbage,
Four yellows onions pureed,
One cup of fresh fennel leaves (the plant, not the bulb),
Six cups of olive oil,
Two pounds of rice,
Three to four cups of tomato sauce,
One teaspoon of salt,
One teaspoon of pepper,
One heavy sauce pan to cook the onion and rice stuffing,
One large pan to blanch the cabbage leaves,
One strainer 
One large bowl for the cook stuffing.
Preparing and cooking time about three hours.



Comments

7 responses to “Annie’s Stuffed Cabbage Revisited”

  1. Oh I love your Annie stories and she cooked for you with great love as you did for her
    I think of Annie everyday and send a prayer up to her
    Love Jeanne

  2. RebeccaNYC

    oooo I was thinking about stuffed cabbage just the other day! My husband recently became a pescatarian so my favorite stuffed cabbage is now off the menu. I’m going to have to try this! THANKS and thank goodness for the sweet memories of Annie.

  3. Kathie B.

    Rebecca, have you tried converting some of your favorite recipes by substituting plant-based meat substitutes yet?

    That’s one of the projects Farmboy Husband and I have been working on this past year. Most of our trial-and-error efforts have turned out well even the first time — although they also give us ideas on how to improve our recipes.

    Bom apetite!

  4. joanna rowe

    Thanks for posting Annie”
    I miss her stories and time you spent with Annie. She was an amazing woman.

  5. All that oil! Holy smoke!

    I would like to try making this but I’d rather do it by your side in your kitchen. That would make my heart so happy. ❤️

    P.S. Now I think you need to share Yann’s recipe for tomato sauce.

    1. Come on over

      1. Oh, that I could! One day, we will return.

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