25 Oct

Russian cooking Friday: golubtsi

Another Russian cooking Friday!

I made borshch a while back, and today I made golubtsi, which are kind of like Russian burritos. Except, of course, they don’t have tortillas in Russia, so none of that wheat stuff. You gotta use something that Russian cooking is full of — cabbage! That’s right, golubtsi are traditionally a rice and meat filling wrapped in a cabbage leaf, with tomato sauce. I didn’t take any pictures this time around, but there are some good ones here.

Here’s my recipe. They were surprisingly quick and easy.

Core a head of cabbage and boil it in lightly salted salted water for 10-15 minutes. Carefully peel off 8-10 leaves, taking care not to rip them. Set aside.

For the filling: Saute one small onion, diced, with 1-2 seeded and diced tomatoes. In a bowl, mix together 1 cup cooked rice, 2 cups ground meat or veggie equivalent (veggie ground, textured vegetable protein, diced mushrooms, etc), onion and tomato, large spoonful tomato paste from a 6 oz/170 g can, and salt and pepper to taste.

Place a large dollop of filling on the inside of each cabbage leaf and fold together “like an envelope”. Stick a toothpick through the folded ends to hold it together. Repeat until filling is used up.

Put assembled golubtsi to fry in a pan with melted butter, turning once. (Use a fork and the toothpick to hold on to them as you flip them.) Meanwhile, put the rest of the tomato paste in a sauce pan mixed with water or broth, and a spoonful of sugar. Add one or two bay leaves and bring to boil, allow to thicken to tomato soup consistency.

Put fried golubtsi in a casserole dish. Remove the toothpicks and pour tomato sauce over them. Place in a 350 F oven for 30-45 minutes. If you have a meat filling, you want to make sure it is cooked through. If a veggie filling, you are just wanting the cabbage leaves to be soft.

Serve with tomato sauce spooned over them, and a dollop of sour cream.

2 thoughts on “Russian cooking Friday: golubtsi

  1. I grew up on that tastiness! My grandma used to make them and call them stuffed cabbage. Since my mom’s attempts usually fell apart in the oven, in our house it was referred to as “un-stuffed cabbage.” I used to love it.

  2. I just started re-creating my grandmothers recipes on my blog – http://cookinwithgranny.blogspot.com/have not gotten to this one yet – Started off with a couple of easy salads and appetizers but I will be making meatballs,roasted chicken, stew and other classic Russian dishes in the days to come. Happy to see there are more people that enjoy that old school home cooked taste.

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