Side Pannel
Kolbasa and Sauerkraut
Kolbasa and Sauerkraut
- Recipe Submitted by ADMIN on 09/26/2007
Category: Russian, Beef
Ingredients List
- 4 lb Kolbasa sausage; cut in 1"
- -pieces
- 2 lg Sauerkraut; (cans)
- 16 oz Tomatoes; canned, cut up
- 2 lg Onions; chopped
- 4 Bay leaves
- 1 pn Basil
Directions
Combine all ingredients and simmer for 2 hours. Remove bay leaves before
serving.
Wow, what a weekend we had! Saturday we went to the Alan Jackson concert
and Sunday we went to an auto show *and* food festival at St. Nicholas
Russian Orthodox Church in a nearby town. We ate so much I thought we would
explode! We had stuffed holupki (cabbage), kielbasa & kraut, pirogi (meat
pie), haluski (potato/cheese dumplings), and pigachi (cheese/potato bread).
The Sisterhood of St. Olga cooked all this food and served it to us in
grand style! Of course they had cookbooks to sell and of course I bought
one. ;^) This is all Slavic food. The introduction says the Church was
organized in 1894 by Slovak immigrants who migrated from the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Many came from Galacia and the Carpatho Mountains,
which is now part of Slovakia.
Wherever they came from, these people know how to cook. I have never liked
sauerkraut in my life. I was eating this marvelous sausage dish and asked
my dh if he knew what it was. He looked at the menu and said "Uh, Honey,
it's sauerkraut!" Guess I like sauerkraut cooked this way! The stuffed
cabbage was absolutely wonderful too. I'll send that one in next. No
scanner - hand typing this stuff in. Here's the kielbasa and kraut recipe.
serving.
Wow, what a weekend we had! Saturday we went to the Alan Jackson concert
and Sunday we went to an auto show *and* food festival at St. Nicholas
Russian Orthodox Church in a nearby town. We ate so much I thought we would
explode! We had stuffed holupki (cabbage), kielbasa & kraut, pirogi (meat
pie), haluski (potato/cheese dumplings), and pigachi (cheese/potato bread).
The Sisterhood of St. Olga cooked all this food and served it to us in
grand style! Of course they had cookbooks to sell and of course I bought
one. ;^) This is all Slavic food. The introduction says the Church was
organized in 1894 by Slovak immigrants who migrated from the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. Many came from Galacia and the Carpatho Mountains,
which is now part of Slovakia.
Wherever they came from, these people know how to cook. I have never liked
sauerkraut in my life. I was eating this marvelous sausage dish and asked
my dh if he knew what it was. He looked at the menu and said "Uh, Honey,
it's sauerkraut!" Guess I like sauerkraut cooked this way! The stuffed
cabbage was absolutely wonderful too. I'll send that one in next. No
scanner - hand typing this stuff in. Here's the kielbasa and kraut recipe.
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