**Discover the Culinary Delights of Grandma's Holopchi: A Journey Through Traditional Cabbage Rolls**
Embark on a culinary journey with Grandma's Holopchi, an iconic dish that embodies the essence of comfort food. These delectable cabbage rolls, also known as stuffed cabbage or golubtsi, are a symphony of flavors and textures, blending tender cabbage leaves with a savory filling of rice, meat, and aromatic spices. Originating from various cultures across Europe and Asia, holopchi holds a special place in Romanian cuisine, where it is traditionally served during special occasions and family gatherings. Our collection of recipes captures the diverse culinary traditions that have shaped this beloved dish. From the classic Romanian Holopchi with its rich tomato sauce to the unique Transylvanian Holopchi featuring smoked meats, each recipe offers a distinct taste experience. Whether you prefer the simplicity of Lazy Cabbage Rolls or the hearty indulgence of Cabbage Rolls with Meat and Bacon, this article presents a treasure trove of culinary delights. Prepare to tantalize your taste buds and immerse yourself in the heartwarming tradition of Grandma's Holopchi.
AMY'S GRANDMA'S STUFFED CABBAGE HOLOPTCHIS (OMAC)
My friend gave me this recipe this morning and I have it simmering now! It sounded like my Grandmother's style. I used the frozen cabbage method for the leaves so I'll give the recipe that way. You need to put them in the freezer over night. If not, you could boil the leaves gently for a few minutes and then let the cabbage cool before handling and taking off the leaves. I added 1 undiluted can of tomato soup (even though that's not a listed ingredient) to my sauce mixture because I wanted a bit more "sauce." I also added some garlic powder shakes to the meat mixture. This could easily be halved but the recipe makes enough for 2 dinners for a family of 4 so I would eat half and freeze half for another day since stuffed cabbage freezes well. I used the Splenda brown sugar. It tastes just like my Grandma's did! My DH loved it. My kids weren't into the cabbage part!
Provided by Oolala
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 1h50m
Yield 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- If you have the cabbage heads frozen, just put under running luke warm water and peel them off and dry them with paper towels.
- Mix the meat ingredients in a bowl with your hands until well blended.
- Place the leaves on a flat surface, I used a large cutting board and place a "meatball" amount in a leaf.
- Roll it until just covered and then fold in the sides and finish rolling and place in a large pot, seam side down.
- Continue until all is used up.
- Place the sliced onions on top of the cabbage rolls in the pot.
- In a bowl (I rinsed the bowl that had the meat mixture and used that) mix all the sauce ingredients and pour over the onions.
- Bring the pot to a boil and then lower the heat, cover and simmer for an hour and a half.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 479.2, Fat 18.8, SaturatedFat 7.2, Cholesterol 123.6, Sodium 740.8, Carbohydrate 52.9, Fiber 8.5, Sugar 37, Protein 28.1
CABBAGE ROLLS, GRANDMA'S RECIPE
Grandma didn't make these often but when she did we all loved them. Old fashioned cabbage rolls take a lot of time and have to cook for 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours (depending on how many you cook and how closely they are packed into the pan), so don't plan on making them if you are in a hurry. This is a dish best made by a group or...
Provided by Kathie Carr
Categories Beef
Time 2h
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- 1. Steam or microwave the cabbage leaves until tender. Let cool. Cut out a 2- to 3-inch wedge of the tough stalk from the bottom of the leaves, taking care to leave the rest intact. Set aside.
- 2. Coat the bottom of a large Dutch oven with vegetable (I use olive) oil and place over medium heat. Add onions and toss to coat. Cover and cook the onions, stirring occasionally, until onions are soft and translucent. Add tomatoes, garlic cloves, and water. Simmer about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally.
- 3. Meanwhile, stir together the ground beef, sausage, diced onions, salt, pepper, garlic, egg, tomato paste, and rice. Divide meat mixture into 8 portions. Place each meat portion at the curled tip of a cabbage leaf. Fold the top of the leaf down over the stuffing, fold the sides of the cabbage leaves in toward the center, and roll up to enclose the filling.
- 4. Place cabbage rolls seam-side down in a deep, heavy pan, skillet, or Dutch oven. Top with the tomato sauce. Cover and simmer over medium-low heat about 1 ½ hour. Depending on how close together the rolls are and how big your pan is these may take up to 2 ½ hours. If you double the recipe it is better to cook them in two batches. It is very important to be sure the meat is thoroughly cooked.
GREAT GRANDMA'S STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS
This is a past down recipe from my great grandma Plazsic. My daughter requested me to put this on recipezaar so she could always look it up to make them...
Provided by CIndytc
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 3h
Yield 12-14 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Core head of cabbage by cutting around the core and removing as much as possible. Boil large pot of water (fill pot only 1/4 or 1/2 full -- when boiling put cabbage into water and cover with top. Leave cabbage in water and every so often as leaves loosen up remove leaves and place in collander in sink to cool -- when all leaves are removed turn off water and throw away -- (if you have any little pieces of cabbage left at end of core, you can save them to place on top of leaves if you would like.
- In a large bowl mix cooked rice, ground meat, onion, garlic, raw eggs 1/2 can tomato sauce and oregano and a little pinch of kosher salt. Mix well with your hands --.
- Spray 9 X 13 inch pans with Pam. Take cabbage leaves and fill with 1/4 to 1/2 cup meat mixture (depending on how big hour leaves are). Place with seam side down in pans -- Turn oven on 350 degrees. Make up sauce (depending on how many rolls you get from your cabbage and how much sauce you want,you can use between 4 to 6 cans of diced or stewed tomatoes for your sauce), if you like cabbage rolls to have more sauce, you can add a little tomato juice to your sauce. Pour sauce over top of rolls. Sprinkle with kosher salt over top of rolls.
- Bake uncovered to 2 1/2 hours or until browned on top, you may need to add a tomato juice to them once in a while so they do not dry out --.
- Freezes well.
GRANDMA'S CABBAGE ROLLS
Hearty and heartwarming, these traditional cabbage rolls are nothing short of delicious. Toasted rye bread and polenta make lovely accompaniments.
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Dinner
Time 6h45m
Yield 12 servings.
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Cook cabbage in boiling water just until outer leaves pull away easily from head. Set aside 12 large leaves for rolls. Refrigerate remaining cabbage for another use. Cut out the thick vein from the bottom of each leaf, making a V-shaped cut., In a large bowl, combine the egg, onion, rice, dill, paprika, savory, salt and pepper. Crumble beef over mixture and mix well. Place 1/3 cup meat mixture on a cabbage leaf; overlap cut ends of leaf. Fold in sides. Beginning from the cut end, roll up. Repeat with remaining cabbage leaves and filling., Combine the sauerkraut, tomatoes and bacon. Spoon half into a 6-qt. slow cooker. Arrange six cabbage rolls, seam side down, over sauerkraut mixture. Top with remaining sauerkraut mixture and rolls. Add broth to slow cooker. Cover and cook on low for 6-8 hours or until a thermometer inserted in rolls reads 160°.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 227 calories, Fat 10g fat (4g saturated fat), Cholesterol 61mg cholesterol, Sodium 620mg sodium, Carbohydrate 18g carbohydrate (5g sugars, Fiber 4g fiber), Protein 16g protein.
CABBAGE ROLLS (HOLUPCHI)
This recipe is one that I've developed over years, and I mean years. One big reason is that I only do these every couple of years but after this last batch I suspect I'll make them more often. Holupchi, for you good Uke's out there, is one of those foods that is quite involved to make but the end result is well worth the effort. When I make it, I normally do a large quantity because it freezes very well.
Provided by whatscooking
Categories Veal
Time 3h
Yield 30-35 rolls
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- For the sauce:.
- Take your onion and with a knife make 5-7 slits (depending on how many cloves you are using). Insert your cloves into the slits.
- Finely chop your garlic and dill.
- Sweat off your garlic and your whole onion for about a minute, flipping the onion once.
- Add the remaining ingredients for the sauce, bring to a boil and reduce to simmer for about 30 minutes.
- Taste your sauce, if it needs more of anything, add it. I find sometimes I need more sugar, sometimes more vinegar.
- For the rolls:.
- Preheat oven to 350.
- Cook your rice as you normally would (for 1 1/2 cups of rice, I would normally use about 3 cups water). Once cooked, put it in a large bowl to cool.
- Core your cabbage. Reserve two outer leaves and shred. Finely chop your dill.
- Bring a large pot of water and the cabbage to a boil. As the cabbage cooks, remove the leaves that separate (with tongs) and set aside. Depending on the size of your cabbage, you'll want 20-30 leaves. (the leftover cabbage will freeze well too).
- Meanwhile, add the ground veal, dill, shredded reserved cabbage, salt and pepper to the rice and mix well with your hands.
- Take a 1/2 cup of the tomato sauce and add it to the rice mixture. Mix again and check the consistency. You can choose to add up to another 1/2 cup of the tomato sauce, this is a personal choice.
- Line the bottom of a roast pan with 2-3 leaves, so that the bottom is covered. Ladle a small amount of the sauce on the bottom of the pan.
- Take the cabbage leaves you've removed and remove the cores. If your leaves are big you may also want to cut them in half.
- Grab some of the rice mixture, about I'm guessing a 1/4 cup or about the size of a golf ball (this again depends of the size of your leaves), and shape it into a finger. Put it in the cabbage and roll the cabbage, folding the ends in, and lay in the roast pan seam side down.
- Repeat until you have filled the bottom of the pan and ladle about 1/2 cup of the sauce over the rolls. Repeat until you run out of the stuffing.
- Take the remaining sauce and pour it all over the rolls. Cover and bake for about 30-45 minutes, until your meat is cooked.
HALUPKI (STUFFED CABBAGE)
Halupki, also known as stuffed cabbage on the Russian/Ukranian side of my family, is a dish made of rice, beef, and pork encased in cabbage drizzled with a thin, sweet tomato sauce. My grandma Eugenia is 98 and she taught me how to make this comfort food classic. Every family has their own twist on this traditional dish. I hope you enjoy these with mashed potatoes just as we always do in my family!
Provided by Jillian
Categories World Cuisine Recipes European Eastern European Russian
Time 3h30m
Yield 10
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Place the cabbage in a stockpot with enough water to cover.
- Add 1/4 teaspoon salt to the water and cabbage.
- Bring water to a boil over medium-high heat. Turn cabbage every 2-3 minutes and remove leaves that separate from cabbage and place in a strainer to cool. Boil until all the leaves have cooked, about 15 minutes.
- Reserve 12 oz. of cabbage water.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Trim thick center vein off of bottom of each cabbage leaf.
- In a large bowl thoroughly mix together, ground beef, ground pork, rice, chopped onion, fresh parsley, egg, garlic powder, salt, and pepper.
- Lightly pack a small amount of meat mixture and place in the center of the cabbage leaf.
- Fold sides over the filling and start at the stem and roll the cabbage up until the meat is encased. Repeat with remaining leaves and filling.
- Cut the leftover leaves into pieces and place into the bottom of a roasting pan.
- Layer the stuffed cabbage rolls over the cut leaves.
- In a bowl, mix the tomato sauce, reserved cabbage water, white vinegar, and white sugar.
- Pour the tomato sauce mixture over the cabbage rolls.
- Cover roasting pan with aluminum foil.
- Bake in preheated oven until the ground beef mixture is no longer pink in the center, about 2 1/2 hours. Baste stuffed cabbage rolls every hour.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 467.9 calories, Carbohydrate 21.7 g, Cholesterol 137.3 mg, Fat 29.8 g, Fiber 4.3 g, Protein 28.1 g, SaturatedFat 11.4 g, Sodium 715 mg, Sugar 10.5 g
Tips:
- Choose firm, compact cabbages: This will make it easier to roll the cabbage leaves without tearing them.
- Blanch the cabbage leaves before filling: This will make them more pliable and easier to roll.
- Use a variety of fillings: Don't be afraid to experiment with different fillings, such as ground beef, pork, lamb, or turkey. You can also add vegetables, rice, or nuts to the filling.
- Season the filling well: Don't be afraid to add plenty of herbs and spices to the filling. This will give the cabbage rolls a lot of flavor.
- Roll the cabbage rolls tightly: This will help to keep the filling from falling out during cooking.
- Cook the cabbage rolls in a tomato sauce: This will help to keep the cabbage rolls moist and flavorful.
- Serve the cabbage rolls with a dollop of sour cream or yogurt: This will add a creamy, tangy flavor to the cabbage rolls.
Conclusion:
Cabbage rolls are a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed by people of all ages. They are perfect for a hearty meal on a cold winter day, or as a light and refreshing meal on a summer evening. With a little planning and preparation, cabbage rolls can be easily made at home. So next time you're looking for a new and exciting dish to try, give cabbage rolls a try!
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