[Sca-cooks] possible-or not-oop question
edoard at medievalcookery.com
edoard at medievalcookery.com
Mon Jun 29 07:07:20 PDT 2009
> -------- Original Message --------
> From: "Marcha"
>
> As I was preparing dinner today, I wondered if the dish was period. Our family
> has always called this dish "German Tamales" and it is cabbage rolls. Ours are
> prepared with raw hamburger meat, uncooked long grain white rice, egg, breadcrumbs,
> and finely chopped onions and seasoned with salt and pepper. The meat mixture is
> then stuffed into softened cabbage leafs. Here our recipe differs from others I
> have read. We layer them with sauerkraut and onions. Then they are either baked
> in the oven or cooked on top of the stove. They are an absolute family favorite
> for nearly eighty years. (My Maternal Grandmother taught me how to make them.)
>
> My question is: "Are they in any way, shape, or form period?".
The closest (late) medieval recipe I'm aware of is this one for stuffed
cabbage:
To make a stuffed cabbage. Take a red cabbage that is not too large, &
put it to boil whole sweetly, & leave it so a long time that you can
open the leaves the one behind the other, while the leaves of the
cabbage are large like a fist, cut that out, & put chopped meat therein
that it will be arrayed like the other meats with eggs & spices, & then
layer the cabbage with the leaves all around, that it will be well
bound, & put it to cook, sausages with, or that which you want.
[Ouverture de Cuisine, France, 1604]
Avelyn Grene has her version of the recipe online at
http://greneboke.com/recipes/stuffed_cabbage.shtml
- Doc
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