Polish Cabbage Soup

"I saw the original version of this recipe in an Internet foor letter to which I subscribe, but I was sure it could be improve, and this is what I came up with. Cooking time DOES NOT include the time needed to make the pork broth, but this takes about 1 hour preparation time, 2-1/2 hour cooking time, and 1-1/2 hours setting time, for a total of 5 hours."
 
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Ready In:
2hrs 30mins
Ingredients:
31
Serves:
10-12
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ingredients

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directions

  • Prepare Pork broth first, before starting to make soup.
  • Brown the sausage slices slowly in a large skillet over medium-low heat, and transfer to paper towels as they are browned.
  • Drain and rinse skillet, and heat olive oil over medium-high heat.
  • Add onions, and saute for about 5 minutes, then add garlic and all peppers, reduce heat to medium, and saute just until peppers are fairly soft, but not well done.
  • Put all ingredients, including pork broth and meat and the sausage pieces, in a large soup pot, bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer for about 1 hour, or until veggies are done.
  • Taste, adjust seasonings as needed, simmer another 10 minutes.
  • Serve with hot French sourdough or coarse rye black bread and lots of cold butter.
  • This soup freezes fairly well, though the veggies do get a little bit soft.
  • Pork Broth:

  • Line a 9"x13" pan with heavy aluminum foil, leaving a fairly generous overhang on all sides.
  • Season the pork generously on all sides with seasoned salt, pepper, and granulated garlic.
  • Place in foil lined pan, cover with a smaller piece of foil, and fold bottom foil overhang over top.
  • Place top shelf of oven in upper third of oven, and preheat to 350 degrees F.
  • Roast for 1 hour, remove top foil, and roll bottom foil overhang back to protect pan.
  • Turn oven to broil, and brown meat well on all sides.
  • Transfer meat and all juices to a large stock pot.
  • Add all remaining ingredient, bring to a boil over high heat, reduce heat, and simmer, uncovered, for at least 1 to 1-1/2 hours.
  • Strain out all solids, reserving meat and discarding vegetables.
  • Allow meat to cool enough to handle, and discard bones, gristle, and as much fat as possible.
  • Chop meat coarsely, and set aside.
  • Degrease broth as much as possible, rinse pot, and strain broth back into pot through a fine sieve.

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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

I WAS retired oilfield trash since 1999, who has lived in Houston TX for the last 25 years, though I'm originally from California. I'm Texan by choice, not by chance! I am now working in Algeria 6 months a year, so I guess that gives new meaning to the term SEMI-retired. I grew up in restaurants and worked in them for 13 years while getting through high school and college, working as everything from dishwasher to chef, including just about everything in between. At odd intervals I also waited tables and tended bar, which gave me lots of incentive to stay in school and get my engineering degree. During the 33 years since, I have only cooked for pleasure, and it HAS given me a great deal of pleasure. It's been my passion. I love to cook, actually more than I love to eat. I read cookbooks like most people read novels. My wife and I both enjoy cooking, though she isn't quite as adventurous as I am. I keep pushing her in that direction, and she's slowly getting there. We rarely go out to eat, because there are very few restaurants that can serve food as good as we can make at home. When we do go out, it's normally because we are having an emergency junk-food attack. My pet food peeves are (I won't get into other areas): are people who post recipes that they have obviously NEVER fixed; obvious because the recipe can't be made because of bad instructions, or that are obvious because it tastes horrible. I also detest people who don't indicate that a recipe is untried, even when it is a good recipe. Caveat emptor!
 
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