The great thing about cabbages is that even if they're half-rotten you can still peel (or wipe...) off a few layers of leaves or black sludge and find perfection underneath. Recently my cooking has been focused on rationing out staples until the next time I have money to go on a serious shopping expedition, which is three or so weeks now, and using up any odds and ends taking up space in the freezer and cabinets. I've pulled a lot of weird but amazing recipes out of my ass and made enough room in the kitchen that I suddenly have extra storage space.
The cabbage in question was bought with good intentions (make a batch of sauerkraut every week!) but never used, and since it was intended for another person's project I scanned past it whenever I looked in the fridge for months. Today I was desperately trying to think of something to cook when I remembered that red cabbage and I got a sudden craving for a dish I made several times this past winter. I had almost none of the exact ingredients called for in the the recipe, "Cabbage with Noodles and Poppy Seeds" from Winter Harvest Cookbook 1e (green cabbage, yellow onion, apples, fettuccine, poppy seeds, butter), but at a recent library sale I'd acquired The Kylemore Abbey Cookbook, which includes the similar "Christmas Red Cabbage" (red cabbage, red onion, redcurrant jelly, apples, butter), which guided me in making substitutions.The final idea for this variation came from my experience making mujaddara, a rice and lentils dish topped with caramelized onions, which I serve when available with spinach steamed with raisins and sunflower seeds. I've been trying not to think about how much I want mujaddara right now while I'm trying to make three onions last for four people for a week, and this was a compromise.
This meal is a cheap way to fill yourself up and makes 1 T of butter go a long way — the original recipe in the Winter Harvest Cookbook calls for six (!!) tablespoons of butter but it's still smooth and satisfying with far less than that. It has just the right amount of sweetness and looks gorgeous, especially on dark dishes.
Ingredients:
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Variations to try: