Serves 6
Sweet and sour stuffed cabbage is a traditional recipe of Jewish families with Eastern European roots. My mother's was a family favorite, but a fairly labor-intensive project involving blanching a head of cabbage, separating the leaves, and making tiny packets filled with a seasoned meat and rice mixture. Then you have to roll them up and simmer them in sauce for hours. You need patience and plenty of time to make stuffed cabbage. I didn't set out to deconstruct the dish. My intention was to offer my family the familiar tastes they were looking for without making the long version of the dish. I simmered chopped cabbage in one pot and in another made a ground beef sauce with tomatoes and the classic sweet and sour seasonings - lemon juice, golden and dark raisins, brown sugar, and red wine vinegar. Then I added the tomato mixture to the cabbage with rice and kept simmering. Amazingly, I nailed "unstuffed cabbage" at the first attempt. It's far easier than the stuffed version, tastier on the second or third day, freezes well, and the flavors please everyone. You never know what you can come up with when you're short on time and long on nostalgia.