Lola’s Homemade Orange Kitchen — Kitchen Tour

Lola Milholland is an avid home cook with an amazing range of culinary abilities from making her own whole wheat English muffins to spice blends such as za’atar, tortillas from scratch, organic yogurt and growing her own mushrooms — she cooks with tenacity and confidence! Lola is also the assistant editor for Edible Portland, a soulful publication in which Lola collaborates with local farmers, recipe developers, chefs and photographers. Join us for a tour of this giant, personality-filled kitchen.

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italian stuffed cabbage

italian stuffed cabbage

Prior to November, what I knew of stuffed cabbage rolls were limited to the Jewish/Eastern European variety, which I make the way my mother-in-law does. I hadn’t given it further thought because as far as I was concerned, it was never broken, and needed little improvement, and when there’s little room for me to tinker in the kitchen, I quickly lose interest. But if I had, it might have occurred to me that cabbage, being one of the ultimate peasant foods, has probably been wrapped around meat that’s been ground and then stretched (always budget-minded, those peasants) with other ingredients and cooked in a sauce in a zillion different ways over the centuries. And oh, the fun we might have been having this whole time.

peeling the savoy
big floppy cabbage leaves

As it turns out, it could be argued that any region that can grow large cabbage leaves is indeed stuffing them with something. The most cursory of Google searches leads one on a tour of Greek lahanodolmathes, stuffed with ground beef and rice and covered with a traditional egg and lemon (avgolemono) sauce; French chou farci, stuffed with beef or pork, sometimes mushrooms, wrapped in large layers of cabbage leaves and served in wedges; Polish gloabki, or “little pigeons,” with pork and beef, and rice or barley (sigh); Slovak holubky or halupki; Serb or Croatian sarma with (hold me) sauerkraut and ham hocks, and Arabic mahshi malfouf which adds lemon juice, cinnamon and mint (swoon) to the usual ground meat and rice medley. And guys, I’m just getting started. The idea that there are this many ways to fall in love with stuffed cabbage torments me, and leaves me daydreaming about a Westeros-length winter wherein we could audition each one.

quickly blanching the cabbage leaves

… Read the rest of italian stuffed cabbage on smittenkitchen.com


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10 (More) Recipes To Know By Heart — Recipes from The Kitchn

What are your recipe essentials? This time last year we shared a dozen of the recipes that we and our readers find indispensable. So indispensable are they, in fact, that we don’t lean on the printed word. These are recipes we commit to memory. But a dozen really isn’t enough, and we all have our favorites, so we’re revisiting our lineup, with ten more recipes that many of us truly know by heart. Some are weeknight dinner staples like baked salmon and fried rice, and others are the most classic sort of comfort foods, like chocolate chip cookies and buttermilk quick bread. Here are ten more of the recipes we love so much we have them memorized. Do you? Or are there others you choose to know by heart? More



Happy Presidents’ Day from The Kitchn


The McKinley-era White House kitchen in 1901

Happy Presidents’ Day! We’re taking the day off, but we’ve still got some great cooking coming to you later today, including a tuna melt recipe made with olive oil mayonnaise and parmesan, and a roundup of ten recipes we love so much that we have them memorized – and we think you should, too! Enjoy the day, and we’ll see you back online tomorrow!
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