Stuffed Cabbage Rolls

Stuffed Cabbage Rolls

This super-easy weeknight meal is healthy, cheap and filling. Cabbage leaves are boiled until soft and pliable, stuffed with a simple lentil-walnut “ground beef” and rice filling (though there’s a paleo variation, a nut-free variation and an even cheaper variation listed below), rolled up and smothered in tomato sauce, then baked. I ate these all the time while training for the Colfax Marathon because I needed hella nutrients but didn’t have as much time to cook for myself.

Yield: About 8 Servings

  • 1 medium/large head green cabbage, rinsed
  • 1 jar tomato-basil pasta sauce (for this recipe I like Simple Truth, which is Kroger’s generic organic brand*)
  • Roughly 3 cups cooked brown rice (can be leftover)
  • 1 1/4 cup green or brown lentils (or you can use 3 cups leftover cooked lentils)
  • 1 bouillon cube or 2 tsp Better than Bouillon
  • Roughly 1.5 cups walnuts, soaked for at least 2 hours or overnight
  • 1.5 tsp chili powder
  • 2 Tbsp balsamic vinegar
  • 2 Tbsp tamari, soy sauce or liquid aminos
  • 2 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce (the Kroger generic brand is vegan**)
  • 3/4 tsp cumin
  • 1 tsp coriander
  • 1 tsp garlic powder
  • 3/4 tsp black pepper
  • Optional: cayenne pepper, red pepper flakes or hot sauce to taste

Note: If you don’t have one or a couple of the seasoning ingredients, it’s not the end of the world. Just season the filling with what you have until it’s nice and savory and you’re happy with it. If you want to use oregano and basil instead of cumin and coriander, it’s your world.

  1. In a small, covered pot, bring 2.5 cups of water to a boil with the lentils and bouillon. Lower heat to medium and cook, covered, until lentils are soft but not mushy (about 20 minutes.) Remove lentils from pot and allow to cool
  2. In a large pot on high heat, boil roughly two quarts of water (or enough to cover the cabbage) with a teaspoon of salt. Cut around the core of the cabbage. You don’t have to cut the core out, but cut around it so that you can easily detach the leaves once they’re soft
  3. Once the water is boiling, add the whole cabbage. As the outer leaves cook and soften, gently detach them so that the leaves underneath can cook too. Once each leaf is soft and pliable, remove it from the water and drain in a colander
  4. Drain and thoroughly rinse the walnuts, then pulse in a food processor until broken into small crumbles. Add the cooled lentils and pulse until crumbly as well
  5. Empty the lentils, walnuts and rice into a large mixing bowl and mix together with all of the seasoning ingredients (chili powder, garlic powder, cumin, coriander, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, balsamic vinegar, pepper and optional hot sauce/red pepper.) Taste and adjust to your liking
  6. Preheat your oven to 350F. Spread a large cabbage leaf out on a cutting board and cut out a triangle of the thick, stem-like piece at the bottom so that it’s easier to roll up. Spoon about three spoonfuls of filling into the middle of the leaf and roll up like a burrito or summer roll, tucking in the sides. It doesn’t have to be perfect. Repeat with each cabbage leaf until your filling is used up
  7. Spread about half the tomato sauce onto the bottom of a 9×13 baking pan. Place each cabbage roll into the pan- it’s fine to get them really crowded. Once your cabbage rolls are all packed into the pan, spread the rest of the tomato sauce on top
  8. Bake uncovered for about 25 minutes or until the tops of the rolls are wrinkly

Paleo Version: 

Use cauliflower rice and substitute soaked sunflower seeds and/or pumpkin seeds for the lentils. Use coconut aminos instead of soy sauce

Nut-Free Version:

Substitute soaked sunflower seeds and/or pumpkin seeds for the walnuts

Cheaper Version:

Omit the walnuts and just use all lentils

 

 

 

*if you want to make your tomato sauce from scratch, knock yourself out

**I’m not in any way affiliated with or compensated by Kroger or any affiliated brand, I just recommend some of their products because they’re on the affordable end of the spectrum and fairly widespread across the US.

Vegan Vietnamese Summer Rolls with Peanut-Lime Dipping Sauce

Vegan Vietnamese Summer Rolls with Peanut-Lime Dipping Sauce

This is the #1 dish I make most often throughout the warm months of the year. I keep waiting to get sick of them, but I never do. They’re great as an appetizer, a light lunch, a way to impress guests or as an addition to a summer picnic or potluck. Essentially you’re eating a salad- you’re getting all the beautiful colors and nutrients and all the crunch of those fresh veggies- but they are about a thousand times more satisfying and fun.

Called gỏi cuốn and originally hailing from Vietnam, this dish is a classic. This version of the sauce  deviates a bit from the traditional version in order to better balance the lack of animals in the rolls, but it’s quick and easy to throw together.

Above all, these rolls are very flexible. The mint and basil are pretty key, but if you don’t have one or a few of the other veggies on hand, it’s no problem. You ideally want all of those different colors and textures and nutrients, but even in the picture above you can see that I made the rolls without lettuce, bean sprouts or carrots, and it was fine. Even if you don’t have the rice noodles on hand, you can do an all-veggie version that’s still good. Likewise, if you want to throw in other veggies, strips of grilled tofu, sautéed oyster mushrooms, or even kimchi or green papaya salad for some cross-cultural fusion, the world is your proverbial oyster.

summer roll

Yield: 6 large summer rolls

  • 6 circular rice paper wrappers*
  • Rice vermicelli or bean thread noodles*
  • 2 carrots, julienned or peeled into ribbons
  • 1/3 red cabbage, sliced into thin strips
  • 3 large romaine lettuce leaves, cut down the middle lengthwise and then in half
  • ½ cucumber, sliced lengthwise into thin strips
  • 1 handful cilantro
  • 1 handful Thai basil (regular basil will work ok if you can’t get Thai basil)
  • 1 handful fresh mint
  • 2 handfuls rinsed bean sprouts, optional
  • large, shallow bowl of warm water

Sauce:

  • ½  cup + 2 Tbsp crunchy or creamy peanut butter**
  • 2 Tbsp tamari or soy sauce
  • juice and pulp of one lime
  • 4 cloves garlic
  • 2 Tbsp ginger
  • 1-3 Tbsp sambal oelek or Sriracha, depending on how much you like spice
  • 1.5 Tbsp agave, maple syrup or date paste
  • 1.5 Tbsp hoisin sauce (make sure it’s vegan and/or gluten-free if that’s important to you)
  • 2 Tbsp water
  • 1 tsp sesame oil

*These can be found at International and Asian grocery stores, most Whole Foods stores (albeit for five times the price), or can be bought online

** Most standard peanut butter has added sugar/sweetener in it, and most “natural” peanut butter does not (check your labels to make sure.) No judgment if you’re not using the natural stuff, but in that case you may not need to add as much agave/maple syrup/date paste to your sauce. Hold off on adding them at first and then taste your sauce and add them in only if you want additional sweetness.

  1. In a blender or with a handheld immersion blender, blend the garlic and ginger together with the lime juice and tamari. Add in the sambal/Sriracha, sweetener, hoisin sauce and sesame oil and blend until smooth. Then add the peanut butter and blend or whisk until fully incorporated
  2. Make sure to have all of your prepped ingredients ready and in reach. Soak a rice paper wrapper in warm water for about five seconds. Lay it flat on a large cutting board
  3. Carefully layer your ingredients on the lower third of the wrapper, leaving about an inch of empty wrapper on both sides and below
  4. Roll as shown here. It takes a little bit of practice, but even if at first they come out looking a little wackadoo at first, they’ll still taste great.

NOTE- different brands of rice paper wrappers will need a little more or less time to soak in the water before they’re pliable, so if you try one and it’s too stiff or too mushy, take note and adjust as you go

summer rolls 1
from https://senioryear2realworld.wordpress.com/2014/03/10/spring-rolls-and-thai-peanut-dipping-sauce/

Serve them immediately, dunk them in sauce and enjoy!