I am one leg in our old house and one leg
in the new one. We still have plenty of things to pack and move, some cleaning
to do in both places before we definitely change the address. Not much time to
cook anything decent, but we cannot survive all week on the bowl of pasta with
pesto (well, I can… My well built man seems to struggle on this kind of diet),
so I try to cook one pot dishes that are suitable for reheating and keep us
going in this busy time.
This is one of the Polish dishes that join
two very popular in Poland
ingredients: cabbage (in this case sauerkraut) and pork. I am sure there is
quite a lot of different ways to make this dish, but this is my own and
favourite way to cook ribs in sauerkraut – with a hit of sweetness from mead
(honey wine) and prunes. Also the fennel loves pork as much as the cabbage. This time I did not use the caraway seeds, typical for Polish cuisine. Hope you will enjoy it.
I hope to be back on the track soon, when
everything gets sorted with the new home (end of February hopefully!).
Serves 4-6
1.5kg pork ribs
4 garlic cloves, peeled and finely chopped
3 tbsp dark soy sauce
2 tsp smoked paprika
freshly ground black pepper
2 tbsp goose or duck fat
1 large onion, peeled and diced
1 tsp fennel seeds, slightly crushed
¾ cup of mead (honey wine - I used Polish dwójniak variety)
6 prunes, sliced into thin strips
2 bay leaves
2 all spice
few whole black peppercorns
1.2kg sauerkraut, drained, about cup of
fluid reserved
salt
First marinate the ribs, preferably
overnight, or at least for 2 hours. Mix the soy sauce with chopped garlic,
smoked paprika and pepper and rub into the ribs, cover and leave in a fridge.
When ribs are marinated, season them with little salt, heat the duck or
goose fat in large heave bottom pan and fry the ribs on both sides until
browned. Do it in batches, do not overcrowd the pan, so they actually fry not
cook. Remove from the pan and set aside. Add the onions to the pan and fry for
few minutes until slightly softened, then add fennel seeds and fry for about a
minute, stirring all the time. Next add the mead and leave it to reduce
slightly, using a spatula or wooden spoon scrap all the bits from the bottom of
the pan – they have lots of flavour.
Next add the drained sauerkraut to the pan,
as well as the marinate used for rinbs (if any left) prunes, bay leaves, peppercorns, some salt and all spice. Mix well; add the
ribs and any juices they released during the resting, cover and simmer for about
30 minutes, stirring occasionally. If it seems a bit dry and starts to catch at
the bottom of the pan during the cooking, add some fluid reserved from the
sauerkraut.
Serve with some mash potatoes or a generous
slice of good bread. It definitely tastes better when reheated and cooled down several
times.
Zeberka z kapusta zawsze beda mi przypominaly kuchnie mojej mamy, obowiazkowo z duza iloscia sosu...
ReplyDeletePolecam tresciwe zupy na trudne okresy. Sa szybkie,zdrowe i na dlugo wypelniaja zoladek. Pozdrawiam:)
Nie znam angielskiego, więc nie poczytam sobie, ale zdjęcia masz cudowne! Patrzę i patrzę... :)
ReplyDeleteMonikucho, dziekuje, zupy tez gotuje, tym bardziej, ze oboje je kochamy. :)
ReplyDeleteAli, widzialam, ze trafilas juz na polska wersje. :)
Pozdrawiam!