**Discover a Culinary Journey through Poland with Golabki: A Symphony of Flavors and Traditions**
Gołąbki, a traditional Polish dish, embarks you on a culinary voyage that delights the senses and captivates the soul. These delectable cabbage rolls, lovingly crafted with a savory filling of rice, meat, and vegetables, are a testament to Poland's rich culinary heritage. Each bite reveals a harmonious blend of tangy sauerkraut, tender cabbage leaves, and a flavorful filling that tantalizes the taste buds. Whether you prefer classic recipes or crave a modern twist, this article presents an array of diverse Gołąbki recipes that cater to every palate. From traditional Polish Gołąbki to vegetarian and low-carb variations, these recipes unveil the versatility and limitless possibilities of this iconic dish. Get ready to embark on a culinary adventure as we explore the vibrant world of Gołąbki, a true gem of Polish cuisine.
GOLABKI (STUFFED CABBAGE)
Provided by Food Network
Categories main-dish
Time 2h40m
Yield 12 to 14 cabbage rolls
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- For the sauce: Heat up tomatoes in a saucepan over medium-low heat until they begin to boil, then remove them from the heat. With an immersion blender, blend in cubed butter one piece at a time until the sauce is smooth and emulsified. Season with salt and a dash of cayenne if you like it a little spicy, but not enough to scare your Mom-Mom.
- For the cabbage: Bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Slice off the bottom of the cabbage head and insert the knife around the core to make a square of insertions into the core of the cabbage. (Do not completely core the cabbage.)
- When the pot is boiling gently, drop the cabbage head in and boil it until outer leaves are softened, 4 to 5 minutes. Remove the cabbage head and wait a minute for it to cool, then begin to gently peel the outer leaves away. When the leaves are no longer soft and they become hard to peel, place the cabbage head back into the boiling water for another 4 to 5 minutes. Repeat removing the leaves and then boiling the cabbage until you get down to the core or the leaves become too small. (It's a good idea to boil extra cabbage leaves so you have the extras just in case the leaves rip.)
- Saute onions with a dash of canola oil in a saute pan over medium-low heat until onions are translucent. Combine sauteed onions with cooked white rice and allow to cool.
- Combine ground beef, pork, veal, eggs, onion and rice mixture and salt and pepper in a large stainless steel bowl. Mix until well combined, then set aside. (We'll call this the filling from here out.)
- Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F.
- Place 1/4 cup filling into the bottom of a cabbage leaf. Tuck the sides of the leaf in and roll the leaf up and over and make a small package. Place the finished roll seam-side down in a 12-by-10-inch baking pan that's at least 2 1/2 inches deep. Continue with the remaining leaves and filling and tuck them tightly into the baking pan. Pour 1 inch vegetable stock into the bottom of the baking pan. Cover the cabbage rolls with a sheet of parchment paper, then cover in foil. Bake for 25 minutes.
- Remove cabbage rolls from the oven and turn it down to 325 degrees F. Take off (but reserve) foil and parchment paper. Pour off the vegetable stock (no need to save it; it'll taste like cabbage water...yum). Top the drained cabbage leaves with just enough tomato sauce to coat the top of the cabbage and make a small pool under the rolls. Replace the parchment paper and foil and bake the cabbage rolls 45 minutes more.
- Serve the finished golabki by topping them with a ladle of the reserved sauce, a little fresh dill, and a dollop of sour cream.
NANA'S GOLABKI (POLISH STUFFED CABBAGE)
I remember whenever nana made these and I was around I would giggle because she had told me what the word Golabki meant. She pronounced it gawumpkey and told me it meant little pigeons. For some reason as a child I found that amusing. No..there are no pigeons involved in the recipe, lol. My Grandma Gerri (German) Used to call...
Provided by Deneece Gursky
Categories Beef
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- 1. Put cabbage leaves in a shallow pan and cover with boiling water, allow to soak in water just until leaves are tender (ANOTHER MEMBER, SHELLY WEIRAUCH, SHARED THIS TIP WITH ME AND I WANTED TO SHARE IT WITH ALL OF YOU:I wanted to share a trick I read elsewhere about working with the cabbage. Freeze the cabbage raw. When it defrosts, the leaves are easily workable and you do not have to worry about burning your fingers. No pre-cooking needed. This worked wonderfully! THANKS SHELLY GOING TO TRY THIS NEXT TIME I MAKE THEM!)
- 2. In a large bowl mix all ingredients except cabbage leaves, parmesian cheese and tomato soup until mixed well.
- 3. Using clean hands form meat mixture into oblong rolls and place each one on top of cabbage leaf. (seam side facing down) Over lap sides and ends of leaves over meat, tucking in edges to secure.
- 4. In a baking pan, pour tomato soup plus 1/2 can water for each can of soup. stir to mix water in completely. Add salt pepper, garlic powder, onion powder, and parmesian cheese to soup and stir till mixed in.
- 5. Arrange stuffed cabbage rolls in baking pan with the folded side down. Sprinkle with additional parmesian
- 6. Cover and bake in 350 preheated oven for about an hour and half or until cooked thru (depends on size of rolls you made) (Baste every 15 or 20 minutes with the tomato soup juice)
- 7. Serve with my garlic mashed potatoes, using the tomato soup sauce as a gravy. Yum soooooooooooo delish!
POLISH GOLOBKI (GAWUMPKI)
Grandma's recipe. This recipe is easier to do in large batches since the prep is time-consuming. I double or triple the recipe and bake them in a electric roasting pan. I freeze any extras and when they come out of the freezer, they taste even better because the cabbage has gotten more tender. My Grandma made these with various combinations of beef, veal, and pork and was always experimenting to get them right. I typed this up based on her notes but she cooked like I do. Experiment with the meats and the flavors until you get something you like. I like to mix up the type of spices I use, sometimes they are more plain with just the marjoram or sometimes I use Italian seasoning
Provided by mikegodphx
Categories World Cuisine Recipes European Eastern European Polish
Time 2h45m
Yield 20
Number Of Ingredients 10
Steps:
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Bring a large pot of water to a boil. Boil cabbages until leaves are falling off. Remove leaves from water as they peel off and set aside.
- Melt margarine in a large skillet. Cook onions in margarine until translucent, 5 to 7 minutes.
- Mix cooked onions, ground beef, chicken with rice soup, rice, eggs, marjoram, salt, and pepper in a bowl.
- Take a cabbage leaf, lay it flat, and trim the thickest part towards the bottom of the leaf to make it easier to roll; repeat with all leaves. Take the darker outside leaves and line the bottom of the roasting pan with them.
- Scoop a portion of the beef meat mixture into a leaf and wrap the leaf around the mixture, enveloping the meat completely. Repeat until all of the beef mixture is used. Arrange the stuffed cabbage leaves into the roasting pan. Top with any remaining cabbage leaves. Cover the roasting pan with aluminum foil.
- Bake in preheated oven for 1 hour 45 minutes. Remove aluminum foil, peel back the top layer of extra cabbage leaves, and pour golden mushroom soup over the stuffed cabbage leaves. Replace top cabbage leaves, return roasting pan to oven, and continue baking until the soup is hot, about 15 minutes.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 311.4 calories, Carbohydrate 26.8 g, Cholesterol 77.5 mg, Fat 13.7 g, Fiber 3.9 g, Protein 20.1 g, SaturatedFat 5 g, Sodium 401 mg, Sugar 5 g
GOLABKI (STUFFED CABBAGE ROLLS)
Cabbage leaves are stuffed with ground beef, rice, then simmered in tomato soup. Works great in the oven or a slow cooker. Serve with pan juices and a drizzle of sour cream, or mix the pan juices with sour cream and ladle it over the cabbage rolls. Also, good with mashed potatoes and cucumber and sour cream salad. Cabbage rolls freeze well before or after cooking.
Provided by Rosey in Florida
Categories World Cuisine Recipes European Eastern European Polish
Time 1h50m
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Bring a large pot of lightly salted water to a boil. Place cabbage head into water, cover pot, and cook until cabbage leaves are slightly softened enough to remove from head, 3 minutes. Remove cabbage from pot and let cabbage sit until leaves are cool enough to handle, about 10 minutes.
- Remove 18 whole leaves from the cabbage head, cutting out any thick tough center ribs. Set whole leaves aside. Chop the remainder of the cabbage head and spread it in the bottom of a casserole dish.
- Melt butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Cook and stir onion in hot butter until tender, 5 to 10 minutes. Cool.
- Stir onion, beef, pork, rice, garlic, 1 teaspoon salt, and 1/4 teaspoon pepper together in a large bowl.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Place about 1/2 cup beef mixture on a cabbage leaf. Roll cabbage around beef mixture, tucking in sides to create an envelope around the meat. Repeat with remaining leaves and meat mixture. Place cabbage rolls in a layer atop the chopped cabbage in the casserole dish; season rolls with salt and black pepper.
- Whisk tomato soup, tomato juice, and ketchup together in a bowl. Pour tomato soup mixture over cabbage rolls and cover dish wish aluminum foil.
- Bake in the preheated oven until cabbage is tender and meat is cooked through, about 1 hour.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 394.3 calories, Carbohydrate 41.5 g, Cholesterol 60.8 mg, Fat 17.9 g, Fiber 5 g, Protein 20.1 g, SaturatedFat 7.2 g, Sodium 1428.5 mg, Sugar 20.1 g
GOLABKI - POLISH CABBAGE ROLLS
Polish cabbage rolls (filled with a mixture of rice, pork, and beef) stewed in tomatoes. This is a dish I remember my Gram making. I've taken the recipe and tweaked it as I've cooked. The dish is hearty and delicious--and known by other names throughout Eastern Europe. I've made it for friends who have never had Polish food before, and they loved it with a fervor that surprised me. It may look very time intensive, but it's a meal unto itself and can be frozen or reheated easily. It also helps to split it into two main phases: 1) making the meat filling and freezing the cabbage the night before; 2) assembling the golabki. For Polish food, it's surprisingly easy (this is coming from someone who makes her own pierogi from scratch). Enjoy!
Provided by LMCski
Categories One Dish Meal
Time 2h50m
Yield 8-10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Chop onion.
- Mince garlic.
- Saute garlic and onion in 2 T butter over medium heat until onions are caramelized. Remove from heat and let cool to near room temperature.
- Beat 2 eggs thoroughly with 2 T marjoram, 1 T thyme/sage, salt, and pepper.
- In bowl, add ground beef, pork (or veal), rice, onion, garlic, and eggs.
- Mix thoroughly with your hands.
- Cover and let rest in the fridge. (You can let it sit overnight, it will just let the flavors permeate more.).
- Core cabbage.
- Blanche cabbage leaves in boiling water, peeling them off as they become limp. (Alternatively, after coring the cabbage, you can put it in the freezer and after it's frozen, let it thaw and the leaves will be limp--you can just pull them off. **If you choose to freeze, freeze the cabbage the night before and keep in mind it will take a few hours for it to thaw**).
- Once you've separated all the leaves, take a paring knife and cut off any thick stems preventing the limp leaf from bending/rolling.
- Put about 2 T of meat filling in the center of each leaf. Fold the sides of the leaf in and roll it up into a little package. Put each golabki seam-down into a casserole dish. (At this point, if you like, you can freeze them and thaw them later. Once thawed, continue with the recipe steps below.).
- Once you've used up all the cabbage leaves or meat filling, take your cans of tomatoes and pour them over the golabki.
- Sprinkle the remaining teaspoons of marjoram into the tomato sauce before pouring it over the golabki and tomatoes.
- Bake covered at 350 for 2 hours.
THE BEST GOLABKI
I double the chicken broth/sour cream sauce. These really are fantastic. You can thank my Aunt Carol for these!
Provided by Diana Adcock
Categories Pork
Time 1h30m
Yield 6-8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- Separate leaves of your steamed or frozen/thawed cabbage and slice off the tough rib on the back of each leaf.
- Mix pork, onion, roll, rice, garlic, eggs, salt, marjoram and the 1 t.
- paprika in a large bowl until well blended-but dont turn the rice into mush.
- Place about 1/3 cup of meat mixture on each leaf and roll, tuck, roll into desired size/shape.
- Set aside and repeat.
- Shred remaining cabbage.
- Fry bacon until crisp and add half the shredded cabbage.
- Pour this into a deep casserole dish, place cabbage rolls on top and then remaining shredded cabbage.
- Pour chicken broth over top, cover and bake in a 375-degree oven for 1 hour.
- Drain off juice into a sauce pan and add the sour cream, flour and paprika.
- Whisk as you're heating to thicken, pour over the cabbage rolls and serve.
- Dust with cayenne if using.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 646.3, Fat 38.6, SaturatedFat 15.6, Cholesterol 170, Sodium 1091.3, Carbohydrate 45.5, Fiber 10.7, Sugar 15.1, Protein 31.8
Tips:
- Use fresh cabbage leaves. Fresh cabbage leaves are more pliable and easier to roll. If you don't have fresh cabbage leaves, you can use frozen cabbage leaves. Thaw them overnight in the refrigerator before using.
- Blanch the cabbage leaves before rolling. Blanching the cabbage leaves helps to soften them and make them more pliable. To blanch the cabbage leaves, bring a large pot of salted water to a boil. Add the cabbage leaves and cook for 1-2 minutes, or until they are bright green and wilted. Remove the cabbage leaves from the boiling water and place them in a bowl of ice water to stop the cooking process.
- Use a variety of fillings. Golabki can be filled with a variety of different fillings, such as ground beef, pork, lamb, chicken, rice, vegetables, and cheese. Get creative and experiment with different fillings to find your favorite.
- Roll the golabki tightly. The golabki should be rolled tightly so that they don't fall apart during cooking. To roll the golabki, place a spoonful of filling in the center of a cabbage leaf. Fold the sides of the cabbage leaf over the filling and roll it up tightly. Tuck in the ends of the cabbage leaf to secure the golabki.
- Cook the golabki in a slow cooker or in the oven. Golabki can be cooked in a slow cooker or in the oven. If you are cooking the golabki in a slow cooker, cook them on low for 6-8 hours, or until the cabbage leaves are tender and the filling is cooked through. If you are cooking the golabki in the oven, bake them at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for 1-1.5 hours, or until the cabbage leaves are tender and the filling is cooked through.
Conclusion:
Golabki is a delicious and hearty dish that is perfect for a cold winter day. It is a versatile dish that can be made with a variety of different fillings, so you can easily find a recipe that suits your taste. With a little bit of planning, you can make golabki ahead of time and freeze them for later. This makes them a great option for busy weeknights.
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