Cabbage
Lumpia Sariwa
This well-known Philippine starter combines attributes of many of the wrapped foods of other countries. It's filled like an egg roll, has an egg wrapper like a crêpe, and is served warm but not fried. All the components, which can be varied according to what you have in your kitchen, are cooked before assembly.
By Mark Bittman
Saté Chicken Salad
For a bold no-cook dinner, pick up a rotisserie chicken, chop some vegetables, and toss everything with a pantry-friendly dressing that evokes the spicy peanut dipping sauce served with the Southeast Asian meat skewers called saté.
By Melissa Roberts
Stir-Fried Bok Choy and Cabbage
This stir-fry is staggeringly simple. A drizzle of sesame oil gives a nutty-toasty boost to thinly sliced bok choy and cabbage.
By Melissa Roberts
Coleslaw with Remoulade Dressing
By Gabe Soria and Amanda Zug-Moore
Udon Noodles with Chicken, Shellfish, and Vegetables
By Shirley Cheng
Quick Kimchi
No Korean meal is complete without kimchi, a piquant condiment of fermented vegetables (most popularly cabbage) seasoned with ginger, garlic, chile, and all manner of fresh or preserved seafood. Fermenting the ingredients over several days gives the dish its distinctive tang, but this easy version, which takes advantage of the funky depth of Asian fish sauce, offers relatively instant gratification.
By Lillian Chou
Linguine with Brussel Sprouts Barigoule
A Provençal barigoule is almost always applied to artichokes, but why limit yourself? Nutty-sweet Brussels sprouts take beautifully to the wine-lemon broth.
By Kay Chun
Buttered Cabbage
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Irish Traditional Cooking by Darina Allen.
This recipe for quickly cooked cabbage has converted many an ardent cabbage hater!
By Darina Allen
Corned Beef with Cabbage
Editor's note: The recipe and introductory text below are from Irish Traditional Cooking by Darina Allen.
Although this dish is eaten less frequently nowadays in Ireland, for Irish expatriots it conjures up powerful nostalgic images of a rural Irish past. Originally it was a traditional Easter Sunday dinner. The beef, killed before the winter, would have been salted and could now be eaten after the long Lenten fast, with fresh green cabbage and floury potatoes. Our local butcher corns beef in the slow, old-fashioned way which, alas, is nowadays more the exception than the norm.
By Darina Allen
Chicken Stir-fry with Yams, Red Cabbage, and Hoisin
Sweet-and-spicy hoisin sauce is available in the Asian foods section of many supermarkets and at Asian markets.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Winter Minestrone
Patience is the key to this soul-satisfying soup chock-full of winter greens. Its depth of flavor comes from cooking the soffritto—a mixture of pancetta, onion, celery, carrots, and the ribs from the chard—for a good 45 minutes and from browning the tomato paste. The result is so savory that there's no need for broth; water, canned tomatoes, and a parmesan rind work beautifully. And because this soup must cook slowly, don't worry about prepping all your vegetables before you begin—you can simply chop as you go.
By Melissa Roberts and Maggie Ruggiero
Fish Cakes with Coleslaw and Horseradish-Dill Sauce
Less expensive than crab but just as good.
By The Bon Appétit Test Kitchen
Spiced Scallops with Balsamic-Braised Red Cabbage
Quickly braised cabbage adds subtle crunch to scallops infused with a combination of warm, aromatic spices.
By Andrea Albin
Asian Chicken Hot Pot with Sesame and Garlic Dipping Sauces
For this interactive dinner, use a camping or induction burner at the table, or just get cozy around a warm stove. As the broth cooks the chicken and vegetables, it becomes a flavorful homemade soup.
By Andrea Albin
Spicy Napa Cabbage Slaw with Cilantro Dressing
Instead of the often-leaden, mayo-heavy supermarket slaw, why not try this wonderfully crisp version? The ginger and rice vinegar provide a fresh, clean flavor, and the serrano gives it just the right spark of heat.
By Ruth Cousineau
Unstuffed Sweet-and-Sour Cabbage
Classic stuffed cabbage is a time-consuming endeavor. This unorthodox version, which uses dried cranberries and a combination of beef and pork, is much easier—and, we like to think, even better.
By Andrea Albin
Vietnamese Chicken Salad
Since emigrating from Vietnam in the 1970s, Kia Dickinson has been generously sharing her incredible recipes with everyone she meets, including food editor Ian Knauer. This colorful mix of moist poached chicken, cabbage, carrots, and fresh herbs tossed with a wild, tongue-searing dressing is the quintessential summer salad—cool, colorful, and very fresh. When preparing this recipe, Dickinson uses the leftover poaching liquid to make rice.
By Kia Dickinson
Grilled Red and Green Cabbage Slaw
Coleslaw on the grill? Absolutely. It makes the cabbage and green onions tender and adds just a bit of smoky flavor.
By Judith Fertig
North Carolina Coleslaw
In North Carolina, the coleslaw is tangy and not too sweet, with no mayonnaise in sight.
By Rick Rodgers