Ready in just over forty minutes, this recipe suggestion makes a good mid-week or Saturday night dish! Yes, you could serve it with mashed potatoes but why not have a lower carb mash like swede (rutabaga) or cauliflower!
Ingredients:
Serves Four
1.5 tbsp. olive oil
0.5 onion, peeled and finely chopped
500 g ground/minced pork
2 tbsp. Bramley apple sauce
1 tbsp. fresh sage, washed and chopped
50 g breadcrumbs
400 g savoy cabbage washed and chopped
70 ml soured cream
1 tbsp. corn-flour mixed with cold water
150 ml beef stock
1.5 tbsp. olive oil
0.5 onion, peeled and finely chopped
500 g ground/minced pork
2 tbsp. Bramley apple sauce
1 tbsp. fresh sage, washed and chopped
50 g breadcrumbs
400 g savoy cabbage washed and chopped
70 ml soured cream
1 tbsp. corn-flour mixed with cold water
150 ml beef stock
Serving suggestions:
Swede (Rutabaga), mashed
Cauliflower, mashed
2 tbsp. cranberry sauce
Method:
1. Prepare the mash of your choice e.g. swede or cauliflower
2. In a large frying pan, heat half a tablespoon of olive oil and cook the onion for 5 minutes until soft. Transfer the onion to a large bowl, add the mince, apple sauce, sage and breadcrumbs. Season with freshly ground black pepper and mix together until well combined.
2. In a large frying pan, heat half a tablespoon of olive oil and cook the onion for 5 minutes until soft. Transfer the onion to a large bowl, add the mince, apple sauce, sage and breadcrumbs. Season with freshly ground black pepper and mix together until well combined.
3. Shape the mince into 12 balls. Heat the remaining oil in the frying pan and fry the meatballs for 10 minutes, turning, until cooked through with no pink remaining. Remove from the pan, set aside and keep warm.
4. Stir-fry the cabbage for 2 minutes in the frying pan.
5. Make the sauce: heat the soured cream in a small pan and stir through the corn-flour mixture. Slowly add the beef stock and simmer for 5 minutes until thickened.
6. Serve the mash of your choice with the meatballs, cabbage and cranberry sauce, then pour over the sauce.
4. Stir-fry the cabbage for 2 minutes in the frying pan.
5. Make the sauce: heat the soured cream in a small pan and stir through the corn-flour mixture. Slowly add the beef stock and simmer for 5 minutes until thickened.
6. Serve the mash of your choice with the meatballs, cabbage and cranberry sauce, then pour over the sauce.
From an original idea here
The savoy cabbage is a classic vegetable - its attractive deep green colouring and crinkly leaves have ensured its popularity has never waned. What makes it even better is that when cooked it doesn’t emit the usual odour associated with overcooked cabbage. Savoy cabbages are at their peak from October through to February. They should have deep green, crisp outer leaves, becoming lighter towards the core. The leaves should be tightly packed together, and the overall cabbage should feel heavy for their size. Read more about this cabbage here
This blog brings a variety of articles and recipe ideas, and it is important to note, not all may be suitable for you. If you may have any food allergies, or underlying health issues these must always be taken into account. If you are a diabetic and not sure how certain foods may affect your blood sugars, test is best, i.e. use your meter.
All the best Jan
18 comments:
...this one sounds great.
This sounds delicious and will go in my recipe file.
Wow...these sound so delicious!
Will definitely give them a try.
Thank you so much.:))
Sounds absolutely wonderful on a cold night. Interesting too.
What a wonderful dish, it's a long time since I've had meatballs.
Although I won't be trying this recipe, I want to thank you and Eddie for leading the way in low carb diets. So glad to read Eddie's last post and how far the UK diabetes diet mongers have come. Sometimes being ahead of the curve counts a LOT.
It sounds delicious!
Not only for you, but attractive, too!
I hadn't realised that the 'cabbage smell' isn't a part of the Savoy. Thank you.
That sounds really good and not a combination that I would have thought of.
This sounds so good! Hugs, Valerie
Oh that is different and sounds very good.
Sounds so tasty that it is making my mouth water!!!
Hugs 💮
That looks delicious and sounds so.
another very interesting sounding recipe. It would be nice that it wouldn't stink up the house like cooked cabbage does, my hubby loves the smell but I could live without it smelling up my house :)
The savory cabbage looks beautiful! I wonder if I've seen them around here...
Thank you for all the information! Sounds so good! Big Hugs!
Meatballs are a firm favourite here, not sure I could them to eat the cabbage.
Lisa x
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