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Stuffed cabbage - goł±bki - recipe


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polkamaniacThreads: 1
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 Feb 25, 10, 18:58    #31
we cook cabbage rollls in a convection oven.

Polonius3Threads: 1,005
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 Feb 25, 10, 19:12    #32
Just intersperse the layers of goł±bki with a thin (1/2 cm) layer of sauerkraut and proceed as usual. It gives the goł±bki a touch of added zing. Bottom of pan and top of top layer of goł±bki should be covered with sauerkraut.
polkamaniacThreads: 1
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 Mar 6, 10, 04:06    #33
That sounds good-we'll have to give it a try next time we make a batch.
krysiaThreads: 26
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Edited by: krysia  Mar 6, 10, 04:20    #34
You can also stuff them with roadkill. Dead rats have the best flavor, however if the roadkill has been there on the road for a while, runned over at least 10.000.000.000.000 times, it adds that zesty flavor to it.
EurolaThreads: 6
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 Mar 6, 10, 04:41    #35
Krysia, It's got to be a special recipe... Right? I never seen a killed rat on the road even more - ran over multiple times, but I did see lots and lots of raccoons. Do you think I can substitute? It sounds scrumptious. LOL.

Kidding aside, stuffed cabbage done right rocks! It's gotta have mushroom sauce, forget the tomato or even worse - ketchup.
japko  Nov 22, 10, 03:32    #36
My mom would always make them with tomato sauce and of course delicious then when i had them years later in mushroom sauce, i thought OMFG where have you been all my life!
cheehawThreads: 9
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 Nov 22, 10, 03:54    #37
it's extra good with a bunch of fresh chopped parsley mixed in with your rice and beef.
Polonius3Threads: 1,005
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 Nov 23, 10, 12:23    #38
Many PolAms use minced beef or even suety hamburger in their goł±bki. To the Polish palate, pork or pork & veal are far superior. If you use the so-called meatloaf mixture available in many supermarkets (pork-veal-beef), that can be quite nice too. Whaddya think?
cheehawThreads: 9
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 Nov 23, 10, 17:41    #39
I can handle a bit of bacon but too much pork always lands me a big zit on my right shoulder and often diarrhea so I like to stay away from it. I used to love spare ribs (pork) as a kid but after several years of not eating pork it was not possible to enjoy the flavor anymore and i have no idea why.. but pork, if you don't eat a lot of it, has a horrid taste compared to beef.

hows that for an answer?

the best 'beef' I've had lately is the Buffalo burger they've been selling at our local supermarket, excellent stuff. Probably because it's grazed instead of raised in a stall eating corn.
TeffleThreads: 28
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Edited by: Teffle  Nov 23, 10, 17:45    #40
cheehaw:
too much pork always lands me a big zit on my right shoulder


Weird! Very ... er... specific condition ?!

cheehaw:
pork, if you don't eat a lot of it, has a horrid taste compared to beef.


Both pork and chicken are basically almost tasteless on their own - they need to be prepared with spices/seasonings/sauces etc.

With red meat, you don't need to - unless you really want to.
cheehawThreads: 9
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Edited by: cheehaw  Nov 23, 10, 17:50    #41
honestly.. I don't think so since my daughter experiences the same thing and it was we 2 who agreed and said 'NO MORE PORK!!'

just guessing but my guess is that eating pork requires some adjustment and if you eat lots of it, most likely you've adjusted.

Raccoon probably is a suitable replacement. Both raccoons and pigs seek garbage to eat.


back to our meal.. I like the idea of sauerkraut added in too, I will definitely try that. I have a few jars of kraut in the fridge, been fermenting in there since October of 2009 and it still tastes great. amazing stuff, sauerkraut.

Teffle:
Both pork and chicken are basically almost tasteless on their own - they need to be prepared with spices/seasonings/sauces etc.


My grandfather had a superb polish sausage recipe, mixed pork and beef and all spiced up, it was excellent after being in the smoker for a day. Kielbasa!
f stopThreads: 33
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 Nov 23, 10, 18:10    #42
we cook them in pressure cooker
Patrycja19Threads: 79
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 Nov 29, 10, 03:38    #43
Polonius3:
Many PolAms use minced beef or even suety hamburger in their goł±bki. To the Polish palate, pork or pork & veal are far superior. If you use the so-called meatloaf mixture available in many supermarkets (pork-veal-beef), that can be quite nice too. Whaddya think?


I went to a graduation this summer with the original way of making these, and I found it
to be way to loose and dry, maybe he used to much minced hamburger, to tell you the truth
I usually can tell whats in them.. but they just didnt look right, they were ok, but I would
have preferred a more saucy tomato taste vs the minced, I guess I was just used to what
mom made growing up.
fka CiszewskiThreads: 2
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 Jan 15, 11, 22:39    #44
This post is Awesome!! My great aunt used to make these when I was little and I couldn't get enough of them. However, no one told me what they were (Golabki!). I am so glad I came upon this!!!

T-h-a-n-k-s!
Patrycja19Threads: 79
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 Aug 2, 11, 17:55    #45
Some suggestions for the adventurous:

Quote Polonius3-

yeah I think I am going to try your recipe Vs my moms.. she used the tomato soup, I have
seen various versions of it..

what I would like to know is what is the very first original recipe, without the cans :)

I am sure this took much longer :)
beckskiThreads: 19
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 Aug 2, 11, 21:13    #46
we cook them in pressure cooker

My mom has used that method in the past. It sure makes the cabbage a lot more tender :)

A sincere thanks PF, for putting up with me FIVE terrific years, muah!
roastbeefdinnerThreads: -
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 Jan 5, 12, 02:02    #47
Is it just me or is the best part of this the cabbage that is used to line and cover the cabbage rolls?
bostonlass65Threads: 1
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 Jan 12, 12, 16:11    #48
We used to eat that but we called it gawumpki (phonetic spelling). Is it the same thing?
KoalaThreads: 1
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 Jan 12, 12, 16:20    #49
Yes, in fact it's very close to the actual pronunciation of the word "goł±bki'.
bostonlass65Threads: 1
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 Jan 12, 12, 18:43    #50
Sometimes I make it the lazy way and just sautee the boiled cabbage with the ground beef, onions and tomato sauce. I get so frustrated rolling the darn cabbage I need it to look perfect but then I realized it all gets mushed up in the end. lol
Patrycja19Threads: 79
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 Feb 25, 12, 20:08    #51
Well, before then invented canned tomato sauce, what was used, was it without the tomato sauce or just sourkraut?
strzygaThreads: 4
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 Feb 25, 12, 21:39    #52
Patrycja19:
Well, before then invented canned tomato sauce, what was used, was it without the tomato sauce or just sourkraut?

Just the juice that gathers in the pan when baking the whole thing. Or you can add some sour cream to it to make sauce. Or mushroom sauce from fresh or dried mushrooms.
boletusThreads: 47
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 Feb 25, 12, 21:59    #53
Patrycja19:
Just the juice that gathers in the pan when baking the whole thing. Or you can add some sour cream to it to make sauce. Or mushroom sauce from fresh or dried mushrooms.

Nice. My grandmother used to make them tiny - half the standard size, filled with loose pork + rice + mushrooms + herbs or whatever, and served them with a bit of melted lard with cracklings poured on the top. I hated the boring standard heavy cannonball of beef/pork stuffing with tomato sauce - as they served it in our high school dormitory almost once every two weeks, and everywhere else where I tried since then.
Patrycja19Threads: 79
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 Feb 26, 12, 07:13    #54
I will be making some in the next week or so here, prob my next weekend off, and I will be
making a double batch one for our family ( cause my oldest brother is a monster when I cook them)
And send some to him, plus one of our friends who just re-modeled my kitchen ( woo hoo)

I think I will make them both ways with a mushroom sauce and then maybe with the tomato juice or my original
way.. I just was curious what was the very first original recipe ( before cans) LOL

I was thinking maybe that they would cook tomatoes down and then bake them on top, but of course spice them
up some, I know when you bake tomatoes the flavor changes ( pretty tasty) Vs putting them in a pot and cooking
them down ( which I have made a homemade spagettie sauce from my garden tomatoes and it was awsome, my daughters
friends asked me what kind of sauce I used from a jar and I said I didnt, they loved it! And it was healthy and I didnt use
harsh chemicals, only a food and ground it into the soil with that dark fine soil and yeah, they were some really good
tomatoes!!
Polonius3Threads: 1,005
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 Feb 26, 12, 12:21    #55
Have never tried this, but I heard a whole head of cabbage can be frozen in the freezer. After thawing it can be used as a goł±bki wrap without the usual scalding in a pot of boiling water. The freezing supposedly softens the cabbage leaves. Anyone ever tried this?
strzygaThreads: 4
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 Feb 26, 12, 13:59    #56
Polonius3:
freezing supposedly softens the cabbage leaves.


It certainly does soften the leaves but I'm not sure if it doesn't change the taste at the same time. Could be worth a try though.

Patrycja19:
I just was curious what was the very first original recipe ( before cans) LOL

The introduction of tomatoes to popular cuisine in this part of Europe is a 20th century thing and even before WWII they weren't popular or grown in the villages. Tomato concentrate first appeared in shops in the 60s. Goł±bki are much older so originally the recipes probably used just the baking juice, with or without dried mushrooms.
Patrycja, when your goł±bki go into the oven put two or three dried mushrooms into the pan (prawdziwki are best, aren't they, Boletus?), it adds a lot to the taste.
boletusThreads: 47
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 Feb 26, 12, 15:04    #57
strzyga:
prawdziwki are best, aren't they, Boletus?

Yes, Boletus edulis. But avoid B. calopus, B.satanas and other black sheep of the family. :-)
JimmuThreads: 2
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 Feb 28, 12, 15:55    #58
We used to use the same stuffing to fill bell peppers, bake until the peppers are tender, then cover with tomato sauce and bake a bit more. I've never tried the mushroom sauce, but it sounds really good!


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