In the realm of culinary delights, Halupki stands as a testament to the harmonious fusion of Eastern European flavors and the comforting warmth of home cooking. This traditional Slovak dish, also known as stuffed cabbage, is a symphony of tender cabbage leaves enveloping a savory filling of seasoned ground meat, rice, and a medley of aromatic spices. As the cabbage rolls simmer in a rich tomato sauce, their flavors intertwine, creating a delectable experience that captivates the senses. This article presents two enticing variations of Halupki: the classic Slovak recipe and a modern vegetarian interpretation. Both recipes promise an unforgettable culinary journey, offering a delightful balance of textures and flavors that will leave you craving more. Join us as we delve into the culinary tapestry of Halupki, exploring the nuances of each recipe and providing step-by-step instructions to guide you in recreating this beloved dish in the comfort of your own kitchen.
**Classic Slovak Halupki:**
This traditional recipe stays true to the roots of Halupki. Tender cabbage leaves are meticulously filled with a savory blend of ground pork, beef, or a combination of both, seasoned with a harmonious blend of paprika, garlic, and the subtle tang of sauerkraut. The cabbage rolls are then gently simmered in a rich tomato sauce, infused with the flavors of onions, carrots, and aromatic spices, until the cabbage leaves become tender and the filling reaches a state of succulent perfection.
**Vegetarian Halupki:**
For those seeking a meatless yet equally satisfying Halupki experience, this vegetarian rendition offers a delightful alternative. The hearty filling comprises a medley of mushrooms, bell peppers, zucchini, and carrots, seasoned with a symphony of herbs and spices. The cabbage rolls are then nestled in a flavorful tomato sauce, allowing the vegetables to meld their flavors and create a symphony of textures. This vegetarian Halupki is a testament to the endless possibilities of plant-based cuisine, offering a delicious and nutritious twist on a classic dish.
SLOVAK STUFFED CABBAGE
I received this recipe from my grandmother. It was passed down to her from her grandmother. This can be made ahead of time and frozen for a few days prior to cooking. Enjoy!
Provided by Kelly Berenger
Categories Main Dish Recipes Stuffed Main Dish Recipes Stuffed Cabbage
Time 2h
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Bring a pot of water to a boil.
- Mix beef and pork together. Stir in onion, cooked rice, parsley, salt, pepper, garlic salt and 1/2 can of tomato soup. Mix well.
- Core head of cabbage, place in boiling water and boil until partly cooked. Separate leaves and trim stems. Reserve about 24 to 32 whole leaves. Cut remaining leaves and line the bottom of large roasting pan.
- Lightly pack a small handful of the meat mixture and place in the center of a cabbage leaf. Fold top part of leaf over mixture, then fold in the sides and roll until mixture is completely encased. Lay rolls on top of torn cabbage leaves in pan. Place sauerkraut evenly over rolls. Lay bacon on top of sauerkraut. Sprinkle with 1 to 2 tablespoons of sugar. Mix chopped tomatoes and soup with water and pour over rolls. Add additional water to reach top of cabbage rolls.
- Bake at 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) for 1 1/2 hours or until cooked through.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 556 calories, Carbohydrate 31.6 g, Cholesterol 101 mg, Fat 36.5 g, Fiber 6.9 g, Protein 25.9 g, SaturatedFat 13.5 g, Sodium 2095.7 mg, Sugar 16.7 g
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
HALUPKIS: STUFFED CABBAGE
Steps:
- Remove the center core of each head of cabbage. Place in large pot of boiling water. Boil until soft, removing each leaf as it softens. Let leaves cool, then trim the thick rib on each leaf. Reserve 14.5 ounces of the cabbage cooking water.
- Boil rice in a separate saucepot until half cooked. Drain and set aside.
- In a large skillet, saute bacon and discard excess fat. Add the onion to the skillet and cook until lightly browned. Chop the bacon into small pieces and add back to the pan.
- In a bowl combine beef, pork, partially cooked rice, pepper, salt, eggs, cooked onion-bacon mixture, paprika, and celery salt. Measure the mixture with medium sized ice-cream scoop to make each halupki the same size.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
- On each separate cabbage leaf, place 1 scoop of the meat mixture at the bottom of the leaf and roll, tightly tucking the sides to cover the mixture. Line the bottom of a roasting pan (not aluminum) with cabbage leaves that are too dark or to small to use for rolling. Place halupkis in roasting pan, making 2 layers.
- Combine tomato soup, broth, chopped tomatoes, and reserved cooking liquid and pour over halupki. Cover and bake for 2 to 2 1/2 hours. Add more liquid, if needed.
- They taste best the next day.
HALUPKI (SLOVAK STUFFED CABBAGE)
When i was growing up my elderly neighbor always made these, and passed the recipe on to my mother. Second to none, the best stuffed cabbage ever!
Provided by Kathleen Brigham
Categories Beef
Time 3h45m
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- 1. Remove large outer leaves from cabbage and set aside. Remove core from cabbage. Place whole head in a large pot filled with boiling, salted water. Cover and cook 3 minutes, or until softened enough to pull off individual leaves. You will need about 16 -18 leaves. When leaves are cool enough to handle, use a paring knife to cut away the thick center stem from each leaf, without cutting all the way through. Chop the remaining cabbage, still reserving large outer leaves, and place it in the bottom of a large greased casserole dish or Dutch oven. Rinse rice and cook it in 1/2-cup water until water is absorbed. Remove from heat and let cool. Meanwile, saute chopped onion in butter in a medium skillet until tender, and let cool. In a large bowl, mix cooled rice, cooled onions, beef, pork, salt and pepper to taste, egg, garlic, paprika, reserved sauerkraut juices and 1/3 cup of the tomato sauce, and blend thoroughly. Don't overmix or the meat will become tough. Place about 1/2 cup of meat on each cabbage leaf. Roll away from you to encase the meat. Flip the right side of the leaf to the middle, then flip the left side. You will have something that looks like an envelope. Once again, roll away from you to create a neat little roll. Place the cabbage rolls on top of the chopped cabbage with sauerkraut and some tomato sauce in between the layers in the casserole dish or Dutch oven. Top with all the crushed tomatoes, remaining sauerkraut and tomato sauce, and a few of the reserved whole cabbage leaves. Add enough water to cover completely. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to very low, cover and simmer 3 to 4 hours. Watch carefully so stuffed cabbages don't burn. Serve with pan juices and a drizzle of sour cream, if desired, and mashed potatoes and crusty bread. Cabbage rolls freeze well before or after cooking, and can be made in a slow cooker (see your manufacturer's instructions).
SLOVAK STUFFED CABBAGE (HOLUBKY OR HALUPKI)
Steps:
- Remove large outer leaves from cabbage and set aside. Remove core from cabbage. Place head in a large pot filled with boiling salted water . Cover and cook three minutes or until softened enough to pull off individual leaves. You will need 18 leaves.
- When leaves are cool enough to handle, use a paring knife to cut away the thick center stem from each leaf, without cutting all the way through.
- Chop the remaining cabbage, still reserving large outer leaves, and place it in the bottom of a large greased casserole dish or Dutch oven.
- Rinse rice and cook it in 1/2 cup water until water is absorbed. Remove from heat and let cool. Meanwhile, sauté chopped onion in butter in a medium skillet until tender and let cool.
- In a large bowl, mix cooked and cooled rice, cooled onions, beef, pork, salt and pepper to taste, egg, garlic, paprika, reserved sauerkraut juices, and 1/3 cup of the tomato sauce; blend ingredients thoroughly. Don't overmix or the meat will become tough.
- Place about 1/2 cup of meat on each cabbage leaf. Roll away from you to encase the meat. Flip the right side of the leaf to the middle, then flip the left side. You will have something that looks like an envelope. Roll the leaf into a small tube.
- Add some tomato sauce in between the layers in the casserole dish or Dutch oven. Place the cabbage rolls on top of the chopped cabbage with sauerkraut and top with all the crushed tomatoes, remaining sauerkraut, tomato sauce, and a few of the reserved whole cabbage leaves.
- Add enough water to cover completely. Bring to a boil, reduce heat to very low, cover and simmer three to four hours. Watch carefully so stuffed cabbages don't burn.
- Serve with pan juices and a drizzle of sour cream if desired, mashed potatoes , and crusty bread.
- Cabbage rolls freeze well before or after cooking and can be made in a slow cooker (see your manufacturer's instructions).
Nutrition Facts : Calories 625 kcal, Carbohydrate 44 g, Cholesterol 175 mg, Fiber 11 g, Protein 48 g, SaturatedFat 13 g, Sodium 1129 mg, Sugar 16 g, Fat 31 g, ServingSize 18 rolls (6 servings), UnsaturatedFat 0 g
HALUPKI CASSEROLE (STUFFED CABBAGE CASSEROLE)
This casserole will provide the same great taste and comfort food factor of stuffed cabbage without all the time and effort. It freezes and reheats well if not even better than the first day, just like traditional stuffed cabbage.
Provided by JPsBarbie
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 2h20m
Yield 10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Chop garlic, pepper, and onion.
- In a large bowl add melted butter, 1 T garlic salt, and 1 T black pepper to the chopped vegetables.
- Add UNCOOKED rice and RAW ground beef and mix really well.
- In a medium bowl mix tomato sauce, brown sugar, 1 T garlic salt, 1 T black pepper, and water. Adjust season to your taste. We like it a little sweeter so I usually use about 1 1/2 c brown sugar.
- In a 9" x 13" pan spread half of the sliced cabbage, enough to cover the bottom.
- Loosely cover the cabbage with the meat mixture. Don't press the meat down just lay it on top of the cabbage.
- Cover meat with remaining sliced cabbage and pour sauce over the top.
- Cover with aluminum foil and bake at 350 for about 2 hours or cabbage is soft.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 431.9, Fat 18.6, SaturatedFat 8.3, Cholesterol 73.9, Sodium 534.4, Carbohydrate 46.7, Fiber 2.9, Sugar 26.5, Protein 20.3
HOLUBKY (SLOVAK STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS)
Make and share this Holubky (Slovak Stuffed Cabbage Rolls) recipe from Food.com.
Provided by littleturtle
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 3h20m
Yield 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 19
Steps:
- Cover cabbage leaves with boiling water, let stand until leaves are limp (2-3 minutes); then drain.
- Fry onions in butter until translucent, then mix with garlic, rice, meat, egg, milk, and seasonings; mix well.
- In a large dutch oven, prepare zapraška (similar to roux) by melting shortening over medium heat.
- Add flour and cook, stirring constantly, until it reaches desired brownness (usually light brown or beige).
- Add a tablespoon of water and stir until smooth.
- Be very careful when making zapraška as it is very hot and can cause severe burns if it comes in contact with the skin, also avoid the steam that rises when you add the water.
- Add the tomato sauce, water, and sugar.
- Mix well and bring to a boil; allow to boil for several minutes.
- Place 2-3 tablespoons (depending on size of leaf) of meat mixture in center of each cabbage leaf; tuck in sides and roll to cover meat.
- Place, seam side down in pot with sauce.
- Cook, covered, over low heat for 2-3 hours.
HOLUBKY ( SLOVAK STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS)
My wonderful Mother-in-law gave me A cookbook named Slovak-American Cook Book. It had several wonderful recipes in it and this is my modified version of one of those recipes. The whole Family loves it.
Provided by Millie L.
Categories Pork
Time 2h
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 13
Steps:
- Put a large pot of water on to boil.
- When it comes to a boil place cored cabbage in it to soften leaves.
- Grease a large casserole dish and spread the diced tomatoes on the bottom.
- Drain half of the sauerkraut and spread on top of tomatoes. Set aside.
- Mix together beef, pork, rice, egg, worsechester sauce, Italian seasoning and garlic salt.
- Peel off outer layers of cabbage when they are flexible. Cut out hard vein if needed.
- Lay leaves out flat put a 2 tablespoons of meat mixture on the stem side of the leaf.
- fold leaf over the meat and fold in sides of leaf. Then roll up to the end.
- Place that roll in the dish. Repeat until you have fill up all the leaf you can fit in the dish side by side.
- Pour the tomato soup on top of the rolls.
- Put the remaining drained sauerkraut on top of the rolls.
- Pour V-8 Juice over all.
- Cover with foil and bake for 90 minutes in a 350 degree oven.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 256.8, Fat 12.5, SaturatedFat 4.7, Cholesterol 77.8, Sodium 584.5, Carbohydrate 16.6, Fiber 4.3, Sugar 8.5, Protein 20.6
HALUPKI (STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS)
My Grandmother Matilda Koval makes these....and they really warm you on a cold night. Searve with mashed potatoes. These freeze well, and also taste better served the next day!
Provided by Leslie O
Categories Meat
Time 1h45m
Yield 4-6 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Boil head of cabbage 10-15 minutes.
- Take the leaves from the head (carefully) Mix the meat, salt and pepper, egg, parsley, garlic, onion and rice together.
- Make individual balls out of the meat mixture and roll them up in cabbage leaves.
- In a 5-quart dutch oven, put some leaves of cabbage on bottom of pan.
- Add cabbage rolls on top.
- Mix tomato soup, sugar, vinegar, and water together.
- Pour over cabbage rolls, cover and cook on medium heat for 1 1/2 hours.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 520.1, Fat 23.6, SaturatedFat 9, Cholesterol 142.9, Sodium 742.5, Carbohydrate 44.9, Fiber 7.8, Sugar 23.3, Protein 34
HOLUBKY (BASIC SLOVAK STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS)
Meat and rice rolled up in cabbage leaves. Easy and yummy. High in Iron and Vitamins A, B, & C. Goes great with pierogi.
Provided by littleturtle
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 2h15m
Yield 3-4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Cook rice for 5 minutes; then drain.
- Remove core from cabbage and place in a large pot of boiling salted water.
- Boil until large outer leaves get slightly limp and separate from head (10 minutes); then remove and de-vein (save 2 cups cabbage water for sauce).
- Mix together meat, 1/2 cup tomato sauce, partially cooked rice, garlic salt, and pepper.
- Place about 4 tablespoons rice mixture (or according to size of leaf) on each cabbage leaf, fold the ends in over the filling and roll up.
- Stack tightly in a large pot or dutch oven.
- Add water saved from boiling cabbage and pour remaining tomato sauce on top.
- Cover and cook over medium heat for 2 hours (check occasionally to make sure the bottoms aren't scorching; turn heat down if they start to).
- Serve hot.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 494.2, Fat 13.7, SaturatedFat 5, Cholesterol 98.3, Sodium 889.4, Carbohydrate 56.8, Fiber 6, Sugar 10.8, Protein 36.1
Tips:
- Select the right cabbage: Choose a large, firm cabbage with tightly packed leaves. The leaves should be tender enough to roll, but not so thin that they tear easily.
- Prepare the cabbage leaves properly: Blanch the cabbage leaves in boiling water for a few minutes, until they are pliable but still slightly firm. This will make them easier to roll and prevent them from tearing.
- Use a variety of fillings: Halupki can be filled with a variety of fillings, including pork, beef, lamb, rice, buckwheat, mushrooms, and sauerkraut. Get creative and experiment with different flavor combinations.
- Roll the cabbage rolls tightly: Make sure to roll the cabbage rolls tightly so that they hold their shape during cooking. You can use toothpicks or kitchen string to secure the rolls.
- Cook the cabbage rolls slowly: Halupki are traditionally cooked in a large pot or Dutch oven over low heat. This allows the cabbage rolls to cook through evenly and develop a rich flavor.
Conclusion:
Halupki is a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed by people of all ages. With its combination of tender cabbage leaves, flavorful filling, and rich sauce, halupki is sure to become a favorite in your household. Whether you are making it for a special occasion or a weeknight meal, halupki is sure to please everyone at the table. So next time you are looking for a hearty and comforting meal, give halupki a try. You won't be disappointed!
Are you curently on diet or you just want to control your food's nutritions, ingredients? We will help you find recipes by cooking method, nutrition, ingredients...
Check it out »
You'll also love