Monday, February 28, 2022

Russian Cabbage Rolls

 Several years ago, someone shared a recipe for cabbage rolls with me that was different.  It had raisins and I think chili powder and cinnamon.  It was sweet and sour but spicy and aromatic.   I don't know how on earth I lost the recipe, but I recently spent days thumbing through my recipe notebook, and I couldn't find it anywhere.  

I went online to research recipes and my first efforts were frustrating beyond words.   Today, I searched again because I really wanted Russian Cabbage Rolls.  The weather is cooler than it's been and perfect for a long slow simmering meal.

I had some luck.  I altered the recipe I found. I didn't add in the cinnamon nor chili powder (neither of which the recipe included, nor did I include the green bell pepper that the author of the recipe included in hers.  And because her recipe was meant to feed an army apparently, I quartered the recipe.  I grabbed some extra items from the fridge to include that needed to be used up.  I skipped steps that seemed unnecessary and decreased my dishwashing in a minor way.  I'll share my recipe since I so altered the original one.  

Blue House Journal Russian Cabbage Rolls

1 head of cabbage with lovely green outer leaves (I had ten really nice leaves on the outside of mine)

1 onion, roughly diced

1/2 cup celery roughly diced

1 carrot, roughly diced (I grated mine because John doesn't eat cooked carrots, unless he can't see them)

For sauce:

3-4 cups diced tomatoes with juices

1 8-ounce can tomato sauce

1/4 cup packed brown sugar

1/4 cup lemon juice

1/4 cup apple cider vinegar

1/2 cup dark raisins

Meat Filling

1/2 pound ground beef

1/2 cup rice

1/2 tsp minced garlic

1 egg

salt and pepper

Strip the outer leaves from the cabbage.  As I said, I found a really lovely leafy cabbage this time around and I saved the leaves specially to make this dish.  I also diced about half the very large head into rough pieces.

Chop onions, celery, carrots.

In a Dutch oven, bring 2 cups water to a boil.   Cut the tough white part of the leaf stem out of the leaf.  Blanch leaves one at a time.  Drain.  Set aside to cool.  Pour water out of Dutch oven.  Fill bottom of pan with chopped vegetables.  

Mix meat, rice, garlic, salt and pepper, egg.  Take a little of the onion and celery and dice it more finely and add into the meat.  Mix well.  

Divide meat mixture between blanched cabbage leaves.  Mine came out to about 2 tablespoons of meat per leaf. Roll sort of like a burrito, starting at the wide end of the leaf and folding in sides as you roll.  Place each roll on top of vegetables in the Dutch oven.  

Pour all the sauce ingredients on top of the rolls.  I also added about 1/2 a tomato can of water but check liquid levels before you do this.  The vegetables are also going to produce some liquid of their own.

Bring to a boil.  Cover and lower heat to a low simmer.  Let cook three hours or so.

notes:  Instead of using a second can of tomatoes, I chopped two tomatoes that were looking a little worse for wear.  They were medium sized, so I figure the equivalent of a 15 ounce can.

Because I use brown rice, I chose to use instant brown rice instead of regular long grain white.   This held up just fine and was perfectly cooked but not overcooked.  

verdict:  This was delicious.   I tasted of it about 2 hours in and added in the vinegar since I felt it was a bit too sweet for my tastes.  The vinegar made a nice balance of the sauce.   I served a big plate of the cabbage with two rolls per plate and a side of cornbread to soak up all that lovely sauce.  



Buffalo Chicken Pasta Bake

 I like Buffalo Chicken!  But I'd only ever had take out wings or frozen wings or tenders.  I've no idea why I felt Buffalo Chicken was something to by only as a convenience.   I find I prefer chicken that is not breaded when I'm making Buffalo Chicken.  

One day I tried my hand at a Buffalo Chicken Pizza, which I need to share with you shortly!   It was so good that when I stumbled upon the Buffalo Chicken Pasta Bake recipe, I was more than ready to give it a try.  I made it as it was written initially but on the second trial run decided that cutting back on the cream cheese (original recipe called for 8 ounces) was a better way to go.  I love cream cheese but it really overpowered all the flavor of the casserole.   We really like the altered version best.  It's still rich and creamy but the flavor of the salad dressing and the hot sauce is better balanced with the cream cheese flavor.

I usually use leftover cooked chicken to make this dish.  You could sub in rotisserie chicken or cook it from scratch, too.

I've only ever used the Burman's Hot Sauce, which we find is mild enough with just enough of that nice vinegar-y punch and the Aldi bottled Ranch Dressing in this dish.  I suppose if you prefer to make your Ranch dressing from a powdered mix (homemade or store bought), you could do so, but you definitely want the dressing, not just the powdered mix.  You'll want that moisture in the dish or the pasta and chicken will come out very dry.  

This is one of those dishes you can make ahead and/or is incredibly good as leftovers.    This makes up an 8-inch pan square pan.  You will get four very hearty servings or six regular servings.

Buffalo Chicken Pasta Bake

2 cups chicken (Rotisseries, leftovers or freshly cooked)

1/3 cup hot sauce (we like Burman's from Aldi)

1/2 cup Ranch dressing

1 1/2 cups Mozzarella, divided

4 ounces cream cheese, softened (the original recipe called for 8 ounces but that's a very rich dish)

8 ounces pasta, cooked (I like Penne or an equally sturdy pasta shape)

Finely chopped celery (optional)

Blue cheese or Gorgonzola crumbles (optional)

Mix chicken, hot sauce, Ranch dressing, 1 cup of Mozzarella and the softened cream cheese.  It's much easier to mix in if you heat in the microwave for 30 seconds or so.  Add pasta and pour into a greased 8-inch square pan.   Top with remaining Mozzarella.   Bake at 350 for about 25-30 minutes until hot and bubbly.

Before serving, sprinkle top with finely minced celery.  I like doing this because it adds a nice bit of crunch, but sometimes, I just add that and shredded carrots to my salad and serve that alongside.