Darina Allen: Cabbage is making a comeback — here are three recipes to try including spring chicken

Cabbage is making a comeback and I, for one, am here for it
Darina Allen: Cabbage is making a comeback — here are three recipes to try including spring chicken

Florets of Romanesco in season are another one of my top additions to this dish.

I guess it was bound to happen at some stage, but cabbage, the humble crucifer, is definitely having a moment on the US food scene.

I’ve recently come back from a few hectic days around the St Patrick’s Day period in New York. I did several events to help promote Ireland and spread the news about the revolution on the Irish food scene.

Despite my best efforts, many who haven’t actually been to Ireland still think we live on corned beef and cabbage. But those who have visited, tell me — usually in incredulous tones — about how surprised they are to find such good food from the gastro pubs to Michelin-starred high-end restaurants, definitely a positive development.

While I was in the New York area, I was anxious to taste as many delicious meals as I could manage to fit in — all in the way of research! So what’s trending stateside?

Well, virtually every restaurant had cabbage on the menu in one or several different forms. Food and Wine Magazine has several articles on it, The New York Times recently devoted an entire page to cabbage, ‘The darling of the culinary crowd’.

When you think about it, this long-overlooked and overcooked vegetable ticks all the boxes. Plentiful and cheap, it keeps well, has a long shelf life and is loaded with nutrients.

Super versatile cabbage can be served in a myriad of ways: Cooked or uncooked, hot or cold, fermented or pickled. Kimchi and sauerkraut and their gut friendly reputation has certainly helped in no small way to spread the word.

Apparently China grows the most cabbage while Russia eats the most per capita. Cabbage allows the chef to be super creative — roasted, chargrilled, boiled, stir fried, deep fried…

Suddenly chefs are praising its versatility, taste, and texture plus it’s good for the bottom line during these challenging times.

I’m loving this renaissance. For as long as I can remember, cabbage was considered one of the most unglamorous vegetables in the vegetable firmament — now it’s one of the hippest items across the US.

Cabbage is super cool; wouldn’t that just amuse our grannies? And it’s good news for the farmers too. There are three major types of cabbage: Green, red, and Savoy with its textured curly leaves, but there’s also Napa cabbage, pointy nosed caraflex and flattened “tendersweets” with their loosely packed crisp, thin leaves. All are part of the brassica, oleracea family.

Cabbage is related to broccoli, kale, and Brussels sprouts, so unsurprisingly it’s high in vitamins, has numerous health benefits and anti-inflammatory properties. Cabbage has been part of the world’s cooking history, not least our own here in Ireland, forever.

Now chefs are using it in and on everything from tacos to pizza toppings, chargrilling wedges in wood burning ovens, mixing it with luxurious ingredients, basting in butter and exotic spices, sprinkling with gochujang and on and on.

Here are three recipes you might like to try.

A Spring Chicken in a Pot

recipe by:Darina Allen

If asparagus is in season, slice 4-6 trimmed spears at an angle and add them to the pot 4-5 minutes before the end of the cooking time for extra deliciousness in this spring pot.

A Spring Chicken in a Pot

Servings

6

Preparation Time

10 mins

Cooking Time

60 mins

Total Time

1 hours 10 mins

Course

Main

Ingredients

  • 6 large organic, free-range

  • chicken thighs or drumsticks

  • 2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

  • 2 medium onions, roughly chopped

  • 450ml homemade chicken stock

  • 12 small new potatoes

  • Sprig of thyme

  • 1 Hispi or spring cabbage,

  • finely sliced

  • 150g peas, podded weight

  • 1 tbsp chopped tarragon

  • 4 spring onions, sliced

  • 2 tbsp coarsely chopped

  • flat-leaf parsley

  • Flaky sea salt and freshly

  • ground black pepper

  • 4-5 tbsp double cream or

  • crème fraîche (optional)

Method

  1. Season the chicken pieces well with salt and pepper.

  2. Heat the olive oil in a 4.2-litre heavy casserole over a high-ish heat, add the chicken and brown them lightly on all sides.

  3. Stir in the onions, then add the well-flavoured stock, potatoes and a nice sprig of thyme. Season with salt and pepper. Bring to the boil, then cover with a lid and simmer for 30 minutes.

  4. Remove the thyme sprig, add the cabbage and simmer gently for a further 5-6 minutes, uncovered. Add the peas and tarragon and cook for another couple of minutes. Stir in half of the spring onions and parsley, saving the rest to scatter over the top. Season to taste, add the cream or crème fraîche (if using) and serve.

Charred Cabbage with Smoked Paprika

recipe by:Darina Allen

Charred cabbage is a revelation — who knew that cooking cabbage in this way could taste so delicious and lift this humble vegetable into a whole new cheffy world?

Charred Cabbage with Smoked Paprika

Servings

6

Preparation Time

5 mins

Cooking Time

15 mins

Total Time

20 mins

Course

Side

Ingredients

  • ½ - 1 medium cabbage

  • 1 tbsp light olive

  • oil or a neutral oil

  • 110g butter

  • Flaky sea salt

  • Fresh black pepper

  • 2-3 tsp smoked paprika

  • 2 tbsp freshly

  • chopped parsley

  • 125g toasted hazelnuts,

  • coarsely chopped

Method

  1. Trim the cabbage. Cut into four or six wedges depending on the size.

  2. Heat a cast iron pan, add a little oil, swirl to coat the bottom of the pan. Lay the cabbage wedges cut side down on the pan, cook on a medium heat for 5 minutes or until well seared on one side.

  3. Flip over onto the other and continue to cook until both surfaces are well charred. Add butter to the pan. When the butter melts and becomes pale ‘noisette’, spoon all over the cabbage several times.

  4. Sprinkle with sea salt, freshly ground black pepper and continue to baste regularly until tender.

  5. Test with a cake skewer or the tip of a knife close to the stalk to make sure it’s tender through.

  6. Add the smoked paprika and some of the chopped parsley to the butter and baste again.

  7. Transfer to a serving platter or individual serving plates.

  8. Scatter some coarsely chopped toasted hazelnuts and the remaining parsley over the top and serve immediately.

Carrot, Parsnip & Cabbage with Mustard Seed

Try this Keralan cabbage recipe, deliciously perked up with a little chilli spice and lots of freshly chopped parsley.

Carrot, Parsnip & Cabbage with Mustard Seed

Servings

6

Preparation Time

5 mins

Cooking Time

10 mins

Total Time

15 mins

Course

Side

Ingredients

  • 3 tbsp sunflower oil

  • 1 tbsp black mustard seeds

  • 1 chilli, seeded and chopped

  • 225g carrots, coarsely grated

  • 225g parsnip, coarsely grated

  • 225g cabbage, finely shredded against the grain

  • 2 tbsp freshly chopped parsley

  • 2 tbsp freshly chopped mint

  • Salt, freshly ground pepper and sugar

  • Freshly squeezed lemon juice, to taste

Method

  1. Heat the oil in a sauté pan and add the mustard seeds. They will start to pop almost instantly. Add the chopped chilli and stir and cook for a minute or so. Add the carrots, parsnips and cabbage.

  2. Toss over a medium heat for 2 or 3 minutes, then add the parsley and mint and toss again. Season with salt, freshly ground pepper and a little sugar. Add the lemon juice, taste and correct seasoning.

  3. Serve immediately.

April at Ballymaloe Cookery School

Friday, April 12 (2.30- 5pm: Growing Herbs and Herbalism with Sonya McGee at the Ballymaloe Organic Farm School, Shanagarry, Co Cork

Growing herbs is an easy way to start your food-growing experience. Fresh herbs add magic to your cooking, providing flavour, colour, aroma, and medicinal benefits year round. Sonya McGee is a certified herbalist practitioner with over seven years of experience working with herbs to support physical and mental health. In one busy afternoon, Sonya will take you through the entire process: From growing to foraging, harvesting to drying, and then creating herbal infusions and teas for you to enjoy. Based in our Farm School HQ and herb garden, you’ll have lots of opportunities to pick, taste, and forage for seasonal herbs around our organic farm.

Thursday, May 23: Food Growing with Klaus Laitenberger at the Ballymaloe Organic Farm School

We are passionate about soil health and know that the nutritional quality of the food we produce is wholly dependent on the fertility of the soil in which it grows. Delivered by soil expert and renowned educator Klaus Laitenberger, this hands on course will cover the importance of soil fertility and how to achieve it, growing food organically — from seed selection to pest control and lots more.

For more information and course content see cookingisfun.ie

Black Thorn

Have you spotted the white flowers of black thorn blossoming in the hedgerows? These are the future sloes, so make a mental note of where you spot the bushes at this time of the year so you can go foraging in the autumn to harvest the berries to make a few batches of feisty sloe gin for Christmas.

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