This recipe if from my Ba Ba (my Polish/Slovak Grandmother) and the entire recipe is printed below but I'll start at the beginning here.
The participants: 1 large head of cabbage or 2 small, 2 lbs. of ground beef, 3 cans of tomato soup, ketchup, 2 eggs, minced dried onions, rice (not instant), salt and pepper.
Take a big stock pot out of your cupboard and fill it 2/3 full with water. Place it on a big burner and turn it on high.
While that's boiling, grab your head of cabbage or cabbages. Take off those ugly dirty outside leaves. If you take off some of the dark green ones too, that's okay. They tend to be a little bitter.
Now go and grab a sharp knife. BE CAREFUL...don't cut yourself! I grabbed one of my new Chicago Cutlery that I received for my 15th anniversary at work last year. See, it's all shiny and new looking! Anyway, you'll need to cut out the core. Just keep putting your knife in and out until you make it all the way around.
See this is what it looks like. You want to do this so it makes it easy to peel off the leaves. They won't be attached to anything and will fall right off.
Now place the cabbage in the water. Wait! Do it carefully! That water is getting hot! I turn the head around to get some water in the hole that you cut out.
Now let's go and get started on the insides of the Halupki. Grab your favorite big bowl. I picked my Ba Ba's Pyrex one...it's my favorite. Break both pounds of ground beef up and place it in the bottom of the bowl.
Next let's throw in some minced dried onions. I put 2-3 tablespoons in the written recipe but as you can see, I use the palm of my hand and just throw them in. I'm sure some of you are thinking that fresh onions would be better here and if you want to use those, have at it. I know the juice of the onion is probably the best part but I personally like the hint of onion that dried onions offer. I don't want my Halupki being overpowered by fresh onions. Anyway, this is easier and this is how my Mom did it so that's how I'm doing it!
Don't forget to check on the cabbage! When it comes to a boil, turn it down so it barely keeps boiling. Mine came to a rolling boil because I was too busy trying to be a photographer!
Add your two eggs. Are you wondering how I took this picture? I used my chin to press the button. No really, I can not tell a lie! I used Curtis...he's my sweetie.
Okay, okay, I confess! I'm making them for Curtis. He's not really as crazy about Halupki as I am. He's crazy over stuffed peppers so I thought I would be nice and make him his favorite.
By the way, this would be a good time to preheat your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
Now cover the roaster and put it in your preheated 350 degree oven for 1 1/2 hours.
Cindi's Family's Halupki (Stuffed Cabbage Rolls) Recipe
~Cut core out of cabbage head and cover with boiling water in large stock pot. Boil cabbage until leaves begin to fall off the head with a little help from you. I stand at the stove and peel one leaf off at a time. Drain leaves. With a sharp knife thin out veins along the spine of each cabbage leaf. Do not cut the vein out.
~Mix together ground beef, rice, 1 can of tomato soup, eggs, minced onions, salt, pepper and not quite a 1/4 cup ketchup.
~Assemble cabbage rolls. Lay the leaf with the vein part towards you, put a little of the mixture on top of the vein, fold in the sides and then roll. There is no set amount to put in each leaf because the size of the leaves vary. Place in roaster with the seam side down. I place the larger ones around the outside of the roaster. I also cut up the remaining cabbage in approx. 1 inch squares and place on top.
~Pour the remaining tomato soup (2 cans) over the top of the cabbage rolls. There is no measurement to this but squirt ketchup over the rolls in a sporadic fashion. Not too much...don't cover the entire top...kind of like if you were putting chocolate syrup over a sundae. But make sure you put enough on it because it adds the "tang" to the tomato soup. Next pour a little more than 3/4 of a can of water over the entire mixture.
~Cover and cook for 1-1/2 hours at 350 degrees. If you make more than 2 pounds of ground meat, you'll need to cook it longer.
11 comments:
Oooh, I LOVE cooking blogs!! I am excited to get back to cooking once it cools off here!
Good for you on your new blog. I will enjoy visiting often!
Wow. This looks so good. I just recently discovered I actually like cabbage. I'm totally going to make this.
This looks just right, only one question, I thought that traditional halupkis had ground beef and ground pork.
just put mine in oven let you know how they taste
Thanks they came out just like my mama used to make
Thank you for your recipe. I have been looking for a well explained Halupki recipe to make for my husband and my 1 yr old son. My husband is PA Dutch and I am not! I wanted to learn how to make a good Pennsylvania dish for my son so he can enjoy the things that my husband did growing up. Thank you for your great lesson on Halupki!
Good recipe, but my boyfriend will not eat the cabbage. He likes the filling made into meatballs with no cabbage. I have tried adding breadcrumbs to thicken and keep the mix from falling apart when made into meatballs, but no matter how much I add, it doesn't work. Any tips on how to fix this?
John and Bev Bendrick
BevJohn1@aol.com or John.Bendrick@vadoc.virginia.gov
10013 E. Alberta Ct.
Chesterfield, VA 23832..
Love the sight,,,,thank you.
My Ba'ba was in Treskow, PA...it was so nice to see the name I called my grandmother....thanks for the old school. My the Lord be with you and your family.
John Bendrick
I can tell your halupki are wonderful, because it's nearly the exact same one my Polish mother used! I was so excited to see your recipe. I live in PA and I can't even find them as good at the many ethnic church picnics that serve them around here. There's only some slight differences in the way I make them. No onion. I cook my rice first. Add 1 can of sauerkraut to the pot. And instead of ketchup, I use tomato juice mixed with the Campbell's tomato soup. I have a dutch oven full of them baking right now!!
I'm from Beaver County, but haven't lived in PA for nearly 30 years. One of the things I miss the most is the food. Anyway, I had the urge to make some stuffed cabbages, but wanted to find a recipe that sounded good to me.
I found your recipe, and when I saw the part about adding the Campbell's tomato soup, it reminded me of my grandmother's stuffed pepper recipe, which also uses the soup as an ingredient. The meat mixture is nearly the same, except it doesn't use eggs.
My grandmother was from Duquesne, but came from a German family, so I guess she got the recipe from a neighbor or something. Also, instead of the Heinz ketchup, she used a small can of tomato paste. Adding the Heinz ketchup is definitely a Pittsburgh thing (we put it on top of our meatloaf before baking), but I wonder where the idea of using the soup came in. I'd be interested to find out if anyone else knows where using the soup as an ingredient originated from.
So glad I found your blog!
Thanks for the halupki recipe...it takes me back to my PA upbringing. My mom would make many Polish/Slavic dishes and I didn't know the difference from standard cuisine. It was only when friends would come over at dinner time and ask, "phew...what's she making?". I'd say 'halupki...don't you eat halupki?' I'd get blank stares.
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