
The Ultimate Comfort Food From Eastern Europe to Your Table
Tender cabbage leaves wrapped around savory meat and rice, slow-simmered in a tangy tomato sauce. This is the dish that makes your kitchen smell like home.
Why This Recipe Works
Stuffed cabbage rolls have a reputation for being fussy. The truth? They’re forgiving, make-ahead friendly, and practically designed for meal prep. The secret lies in three things: properly softened cabbage leaves that roll without tearing, a filling that’s moist but not mushy, and a sauce that balances acidity with subtle sweetness.
Every culture has their version—Polish golabki, Ukrainian holubtsi, Hungarian töltött káposzta. This recipe honors the tradition while streamlining the process so you actually want to make them on a weeknight.
What Makes These the BEST Stuffed Cabbage Rolls
| Element | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Pre-cooked rice | Prevents gummy, underdone filling |
| Mixed meats | Pork + beef = juicier, more complex flavor |
| Savoy cabbage | More flexible than green, easier to roll |
| Slow oven finish | Even cooking, deeper sauce penetration |
| Resting time | Flavors meld, rolls hold together when served |
Ingredients
For the Cabbage
- 1 large head Savoy cabbage (about 2 lbs)
- Water for boiling
- 1 tbsp salt
For the Filling
- 1 lb ground pork
- ½ lb lean ground beef (85/15)
- 1½ cups cooked white rice, cooled
- 1 medium onion, finely diced
- 3 cloves garlic, minced
- 1 egg, lightly beaten
- 1 tsp salt
- ½ tsp black pepper
- ½ tsp paprika
- 2 tbsp fresh parsley, chopped
For the Sauce
- 1 (28 oz) can crushed tomatoes
- 1 (8 oz) can tomato sauce
- 2 tbsp tomato paste
- 2 tbsp brown sugar
- 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar
- 1 tsp Worcestershire sauce
- 1 tsp salt
- ½ tsp black pepper
- ½ tsp paprika
- 1 bay leaf
For Assembly
- Reserved cabbage cooking liquid (about 1 cup)
- 2 tbsp fresh dill, chopped (for serving)
Step-by-Step Instructions
1. Soften the Cabbage Leaves
Bring a large pot of salted water to boil. Core the cabbage and carefully peel off leaves as they soften in the water, 2-3 minutes per batch. You’ll need 12-14 large, intact leaves.
Pro tip: If a leaf tears, use it to line the bottom of your baking dish—no waste.
Transfer softened leaves to ice water to stop cooking, then drain on towels. Trim the thick central vein from each leaf with a paring knife—this makes rolling effortless.
2. Make the Filling
In a large bowl, combine pork, beef, cooked rice, onion, garlic, egg, salt, pepper, paprika, and parsley. Use your hands—overmixing with a spoon toughens the meat. Mix just until combined.
3. Prepare the Sauce
Whisk together crushed tomatoes, tomato sauce, tomato paste, brown sugar, vinegar, Worcestershire, salt, pepper, paprika, and bay leaf in a bowl. Taste and adjust—should be tangy-sweet, not flat.
4. Roll the Cabbage Rolls
Lay a cabbage leaf flat, convex side down. Place ¼ cup filling (about the size of a small sausage) at the stem end. Fold stem over filling, fold in sides, roll tightly toward the leaf tip. Think burrito technique—tight but not strangling.
Place seam-side down in a deep 9×13 baking dish. Repeat with remaining leaves and filling.
5. Sauce and Simmer
Pour sauce evenly over rolls, ensuring each is covered. Add reserved cabbage cooking liquid around edges—this prevents scorching and creates steam.
Cover tightly with foil. Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 1 hour. Uncover and bake 30 minutes more until sauce thickens and rolls are fork-tender.
6. Rest and Serve
Let stand 15 minutes before serving—this is non-negotiable. The filling sets, the flavors settle, and you can actually plate them without falling apart. Scatter fresh dill over top.
Serving Suggestions
- Classic: Straight from the dish with crusty rye bread
- With sides: Buttered egg noodles or mashed potatoes
- Elevated: Sour cream dollop, extra dill, cracked black pepper
- Next day: Sliced and pan-fried until crispy edges form
Chef’s Tips for Success
Don’t skip the rice cooling. Hot rice continues cooking in the filling and turns mushy. Cold rice holds its texture.
Savoy over green cabbage. The crinkled leaves are naturally more pliable and have better flavor. Green cabbage works but requires more careful handling.
Make Ahead: Assemble rolls and sauce, cover, refrigerate up to 24 hours. Add 15 minutes to covered baking time.
Freezer Friendly: Freeze unbaked rolls in sauce for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight, then bake as directed.
The torn leaf trick: Line your baking dish with damaged leaves before adding rolls— prevents sticking and adds flavor to the sauce.
Storage & Make-Ahead
| Method | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerated (baked) | 4 days | Flavors improve on day 2 |
| Unbaked (assembled) | 24 hours | Keep covered in fridge |
| Frozen (unbaked) | 3 months | Thaw overnight before baking |
| Frozen (baked) | 2 months | Reheat covered at 350°F |
Variations
| Version | Modifications |
|---|---|
| Ukrainian style | Add sauerkraut to sauce, use all beef |
| Polish golabki | Serve with mushroom sauce instead of tomato |
| Vegetarian | Sub lentils and mushrooms for meat, vegetable broth |
| Low-carb | Use cauliflower rice, add extra egg as binder |
| Instant Pot | Manual 25 min, natural release 10 min |
What Readers Are Saying
“My grandmother made these every Christmas. This recipe captured that flavor I thought I’d lost. Made me cry in the kitchen—in a good way.” — Elena R.
“First time making cabbage rolls and they didn’t fall apart! The tip about trimming the vein saved me.” — Marcus T.
“Tripled the batch, froze two pans. Best meal prep decision I’ve made all year.” — Jennifer K.
Nutrition (per roll, 12 rolls)
| Amount | |
|---|---|
| Calories | 245 |
| Protein | 14g |
| Fat | 12g |
| Carbs | 20g |
| Fiber | 3g |
FAQ
Can I use instant rice?
Not recommended—it gets mushy. Use cooked long-grain white or brown rice.
Why are my rolls falling apart?
Either undercooked cabbage (leaves too stiff) or not resting before serving. Both matter.
Can I make these in a slow cooker?
Yes—layer rolls, pour sauce over, cook low 6-7 hours.
My sauce is too thin.
Uncover for the last 30 minutes as directed, or simmer on stovetop after baking to reduce.
What if I can’t find Savoy cabbage?
Green cabbage works. Blanch leaves longer (4-5 minutes) and be gentle when rolling.
Made this? Tell me your family version in the comments—every household has their twist and I love learning the variations! 📸
Related Recipes
- Polish Pierogi
- Hungarian Goulash
- Ukrainian Borscht
Prep: 45 min | Cook: 1 hr 30 min | Rest: 15 min | Yield: 12 rolls (6 servings) | Difficulty: Intermediate
Keywords: stuffed cabbage rolls, holubtsi recipe, golabki recipe, cabbage rolls with meat and rice, Eastern European recipes, comfort food recipes, make ahead dinner, cabbage roll casserole, traditional Polish recipes, Ukrainian cabbage rolls