My mother's family was from Kiev. She made stuffed cabbage and it always had rice as a binder. The next time I encountered rice as the binder was at Kramarczuk's in Minneapolis.
'You use rice in the cabbage' I said. 'Where are you from?'
'Kiev' they answered.
Curious I thought to myself. The culinary DNA was pan cultural, cross DNA. Mine Jewish. Kramarczuk's gentile.
So here it is, perfected.
Kiev style stuffed cabbage
For the filling2-1/4 lb ground meat, equal parts beef, pork and veal. Don’t spare the fat.
2/3 cup uncooked white rice
½ cup raisins, good quality, organic if possible
4 eggs
1 medium onion, minced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1-1/2 tsp salt
Saute onion and garlic. Add rice and salt and raisins. Remove from heat, let cool. Beat eggs. Saute a spoonful to check and adjust seasoning. Combine all ingredients, set aside.
For the sauce:
2- 28 oz can whole tomatoes, good quality (San Marzano, or Trader Joes no salt etc)
1 quart chicken stock
½ cup light brown sugar
4 oz fresh ginger, sliced 1/8”
¼ cup cider vinegar
1 Tbs ground coriander
1 Tbs ground cumin
½ tsp crushed red pepper
½ cup raisins
1 tsp salt
All the cabbage leaves from the core, too small to make rolls, shredded
Separate the tomatoes from the liquid. Julienne the tomatoes. Over medium heat, add oil to heavy bottomed large pot and toast/saute cumin and coriander for a few minutes. Add crushed red pepper and ginger, saute lightly. Add remaining ingredients. Bring to a boil, set aside.
The cabbage:The cabbage has to be softened. You can blanch the whole head in a steamer rack over boiling water for ten minutes, then shock in ice water back to room temp. Or, you can freeze the cabbage, then allow to defrost. Either way discard the one or two outermost leaves, but save the leaves that are too small for rolls and set aside, as per the above. It would be chef like to use Savoy cabbage, but the leaves are too delicate for our purposes. Regular old cabbage works best, big heads because we want lots of big leaves.
The rolls:Use about 1-1/2 golfball sized rounds of filling per roll. Bear in mind that rice and eggs expand. Think about making all the rolls the same size, even though the leaves are all different. Leave no slack as you wrap cabbage around filling. As the leaves get smaller, you can use two or even three to make a roll. After you have made a few you’ll get the hang of it. Accumulate all rolls and set aside.
AssemblyCarefully place rolls in pot with sauce. Either bring to a boil slowly (you CANNOT stir else you'll break the rolls) and simmer for an hour or so, or place the covered pot (Le Creuset Dutch oven is very good for this) in a 350F oven for about 75 minutes. Test for doneness. The rice in the rolls should be tender, almost like the rice in a good rice pudding.
Finishing the sauce, and platingCarefully remove rolls from pot and place in serving/ovenable dishes (Covered casserole type dishes). Then remove all solids and carefully arrange over and around rolls, as you please. Return uncovered pot to high flame. Boil and reduce liquid until sauce thickly coats a wooden spoon. Adjust seasoning and brown sugar/vinegar as necessary. Add reduced sauce back to casserole dishes. Should be enough sauce to just barely immerse the cabbage rolls.
Chicago is my spiritual chow home