John’s Haluski

When John first described this recipe to me, I was a bit sceptical. I like cabbage, I like noodles. But together? After making his recipe for Haluski, the answer is a resounding YES!

Haluski is a dish that originated in eastern Europe. There are versions from Poland, Slovakia, Ukraine, Hungary and Romania–all places where cabbage grows well and people like dumplings and noodles. Since my grandfather Rang grew up in northern Germany where people like both, he probably ate something similar to haluski, though his mother may have called it something like “Speck mit Kraut und Spaetzle.”

As is the case with most dishes created by housewives needing to feed their families on limited budgets, there are many different haluski recipes that use ingredients available in different regions. All, however, use cabbage and noodles as the two main ingredients. John started with a recipe from the food channel and modified it to make it more pleasing to the eye and tastebuds.

The result is a one dish meal that you really should try. Like me, you may put it on your “Make it again” list.

The quantities below will make four to six servings.

INGREDIENTS:

1 green cabbage, about 6 inches in diameter
1/2 stick butter
1 large onion, about 4 inches in diameter
2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. garlic powder
1/2 lb. bacon
1/2 lb. cooked ham
8 oz. wide egg noodles
1 small sweet yellow banana pepper
1/4 red bell pepper
1/4 green bell pepper
1/2- 3/4 cup chicken broth
1 T white vinegar
2 T water
1 teaspoon black pepper
Grated Romano or Parmesan cheese

PROCEDURE:

Bring a large pot of water to a boil. While the water is coming to the boil, wash the cabbage head, removing any bad outer leaves. Cut the top and bottom off the onion and remove the outer husk. Wash the peppers. Cut off the stems, cut the peppers in half and remove the white membrane and seeds.

When the water comes to the boil, put the cabbage into the pot and cook it until crisp tender, about five to eight minutes. Remove the cabbage head to a colander to drain and cool. Reserve the hot water for cooking the noodles. When the head is cool enough to handle, remove the core and cut the cabbage into half inch slices. You should have five to six cups of cabbage.

While the cabbage is cooking and cooling, julienne the onion and peppers. Julienne means to cut the food into thin strips. To Julienne an onion, cut it in half from top to bottom, put the cut side down on a cutting board and slice parallel to the grain. Cut the peppers into strips about 1/8 inch wide and 2 inches long. You should have about two cups of onion and a total of about 3/4 cup of the peppers.

Cut the bacon and ham into half inch pieces. Melt a tablespoon of butter in a large skillet and fry the bacon over medium heat until it begins to crisp. Add the ham and fry until it begins to brown, about 2 minutes.

Remove the meat from the pan, add three more tablespoons of butter and the onions.  Sprinkle on about 1/4 teaspoon garlic powder and 1/2 teaspoon salt. Cook the onions about ten minutes over low heat, stirring often.

Stir in the cabbage and raise the heat to medium or medium high. Stir every minute until the onions and cabbage start to caramelize. This will take 10 to 12 minutes. Add the julienned peppers and cook for one or two minutes.  Remove the pan from the heat if the noodles are not ready.

While the onion and cabbage are cooking, heat the water in the large pot to boiling.  When the water is at a full boil, add a teaspoon of salt and the noodles and cook to al dente (about five or six minutes). Drain them in a colander and rinse in cold water to stop the cooking process.

Put the onion and cabbage mixture into the large pot. Place the pot over low to medium heat. Deglaze the skillet over medium heat with a tablespoon of white vinegar and two tablespoons of water and pour the liquid into the large pot.

Add the meat and noodles, chicken broth, the remaining garlic powder, 1/4 teaspoon salt and the pepper. Mix well and let the haluski cook for 5 more minutes or so to blend the flavors. Taste and adjust the seasoning. Sprinkle lightly with the grated cheese and offer more at the table.

Serve with bread, salad and a glass of good beer for a satisfying and tasty dinner.

NOTES:  Do not overcook the noodles!  They will continue cooking after the other ingredients are added when you assemble the dish.  John uses garlic salt instead of powdered garlic and regular salt.  You can deglaze the pan with a quarter cup of dry white wine.  I used instant chicken bouillon to make the broth.  Feel free to customize this recipe after you have made it once or twice.

If you don’t like peppers, leave them out or substitute a carrot.  If you don’t have ham, use kielbasa.  If you think a little parsley sprinkled on top would add to the dish, try it.   Have fun!

Couscous Salad

Our friends Wayne and Sondra introduced us to couscous many years ago on a snowy winter evening at the cabin.  Instead of peeling potatoes to accompany the fish poaching in her electric “salmon skillet,” Sondra brought some chicken broth to boiling and stirred in a cup of what I thought was a kind of rice.  In a few minutes I was eating couscous with Lake Superior salmon.  I have been hooked ever since.

Couscous is a North African variety of pasta.  Like spaghetti or noodles, couscous is made of semolina flour that is shaped into little pellets about the size of sesame seeds.  Today you can buy couscous in most supermarkets.  It is precooked and takes only a few minutes to prepare for serving.  Properly made, it is a wonderful fluffy source of starch.

A few years ago my sister Barbara gave me a copy of the Wisconsin Herb Cookbook, by Suzanne Breckenridge & Marjorie Snyder.  I try to make at least one recipe promptly from any gift cookbook, and the couscous salad recipe caught my eye.

It is a wonderful summer salad, makes a satisfying lunch by itself and uses up some of the zucchini that keeps showing up on your doorstep.

INGREDIENTS:

4 cups chicken broth
7 T vegetable or olive oil
1/4 tsp. each turmeric, ground allspice, ground cloves, ground ginger
2 cups couscous
1/2 cup golden raisins
1/2 cup dried apricots, in tiny dice
2 cups zucchini, unpeeled, core removed and chopped
1-1 1/2 cups carrots, chopped
1/3 cup chopped red onion
3 1/2 T lemon juice
1/2 tsp. salt
3 T each minced fresh chives and fresh mint
2 tsp. honey
1/2 cup toasted slivered almonds

PROCEDURE:

Start by chopping the apricots into an eighth-inch dice.

Bring the broth, four tablespoons of oil and spices to a boil. Add the couscous and boil over moderate heat two minutes or until the liquid is absorbed. 

Add the apricots and raisins.  Cover the pan and let it stand fifteen minutes. Put the pan into the refrigerator until the couscous is cold.

Wash and chop the zucchini into a quarter to one-third-inch dice.  Peel the carrots and chop them into a quarter-inch dice.  Remove the dry outer husk of the onion and chop it into a quarter-inch dice.

Toast the almonds and set them aside and wash and chop the chives and mint.

Break up the couscous until each grain is separate and add the rest of the ingredients including the remaining oil. Taste and adjust the seasoning. Chill the salad four hours and taste it before serving. You may need to add a little more salt at this time.  If the salad is too dry, add more oil and lemon juice. Garnish with toasted almonds before serving.

NOTES:  Couscous tastes a bit like cereal and is especially good with salmon and meats cooked on the grill. Try it with steak, shrimp or chicken.  Made with broth, all it needs is some salt and pepper, though you can experiment with additions including minced garlic, mint, hot sauce or grated Parmesan or Romano cheese.

You can use plain or Israeli couscous.  Plain couscous is about the size of half a grain of rice. Israeli couscous is larger and must be cooked about ten minutes   You should use about two and a half cups of Israeli couscous.

There are many more good recipes in the Wisconsin Herb Cookbook.  If you collect cookbooks, it will be a fine addition to your library.