You are such a delight to listen to and we love your stories as much as your wonderful recipes. "I was born a coal miner's granddaughter" with mom's family from southern OH & WV. Our version is called Slumgullion, done in the oven and starts with hamburger, cabbage and tomatoes then whatever else you have. Often includes carrots, potatoes and or turnips & onions. Layered with salt & pepper to taste & baked in a lidded roaster or whatever you have that holds it all. No water added as the tomatoes & cabbage add enough for our taste but you could. We love the cabbage to begin carmelizing with the meat. Omg, so good. We serve with a hearty bread slathered in butter, perfect for cleaning the bowl at the end. Thank you for working to keep some of these great old recipes and ways to live healthy while cheaply, alive and well for another generation.
Glad you have great memories of your Granny. It makes your life more fulfilled. How many women today give credit to their Granny for cooking, sewing, gardening and many other things in their lives. Hope she is still with us, today.
I get celery cheap on sale and then dehydrate a whole mess of it. It stores well dry. We’ve been making this stew since childhood. My wife added more to it with her own knowledge of herbs. She’s a dynamite cook! We skip the dumplings and go with crackers. This is so healthy and delicious! Growing the ingredients yourself makes it so much better, I agree!
Sometimes I use sausage as the meat in soups. It adds a different flavor for a change. At the end of the week, I even add some leftovers and odds and ends of veggies. My Mom used to call it Friday soup. I remember her putting some leftover macaroni and cheese in it and it was yummy. Thank you for your version and your memories around the stew.
Tipper, your cabbage stew looks delicious much like some thing my mother used to make. With my mother and father both gone I always find it comforting to listen to your voice, you sound like home. How I miss those days. I think I will be trying your version of cabbage stew have a wonderful day, you bring much joy to this southern girl who lives among the Yankees.
I make a similar stew/soup but use chicken more often than beef. Also, I use chicken broth instead of water and sometimes add a can of Rotel to spice it up a bit... Sometimes I'll bundle up and eat it on the deck by the Hiwassee River... The cool air, sound of water rippling, and tasty hot and hearty stew makes a great combo! :)
" bundle up and eat it on the deck by the Hiwassee River... The cool air, sound of water rippling, and tasty hot and hearty stew makes a great combo! :) " Thank you for such a warm and happy visual. I know My Day is coming! Be Blessed!
I love cabbage. Was raised on it. My mom would send me and my sister to the store to get cabbage. We would walk to the store and get a head of cabbage. While we were walking home, we would tear off some of the leaves and munch on it on the way home. Still love chewing on raw cabbage for a snack.
Mother made a quick, easy, and delicious soup that I nicknamed Bachelor Soup. It starts with a 46 oz. can of tomato juice. Next add a can of chili with beans. This contains all the meat and seasoning you'll need and one of the vegetables. Finally, add an assortment of 5 cans of vegetables. (I like peas, corn, tomatoes with okra, diced potato, and mixed veg.). Most are undrained, but drain and rinse black beans if you use those. Now you can go wild with options. I like chopped green chilis or hominy. Maybe I have a little leftover macaroni, pot roast, fried cabbage, rotisserie chicken, or spaghetti in the fridge. Toss it in (somewhat sparingly). This soup is a little different each time I make it, but always delicious. And, it makes enough for leftovers or for freezing. Bon appétit!
This is a variation of a soup that I make often with cornbread. It’s so good, and I love one pot meals, especially in the winter. It’s also cool to hear you refer to lunch as dinner, because my family did that when I was young. It’s been lunch to me for so long now, though, that it took me a moment to get your meaning. 😂 My grandmother also saved green stamps, and I remember helping her lick the stamps to fill the books. She usually redeemed them for some kind of kitchenware which she then kindly put into my hope chest. Decades later I still have and use some of those things.
I did the same for my own 5 kids. I got the silverware sets - I learned to do this from my mom, who did this for all of us 6 kids. (They were wedding gifts.) I remember the Eagle stamps, Green Stamps, Box Tops, etc. Thanks for the recipe, and the video.
Yes, however green stamps were back in the 70s not in the 80s. When, you filled up the books, you could turn them in at your local grocery stores for merchandise they featured or you could go to one of the True Value Stamp Stores and use them. Box Tops didn’t start till the mid to late 70s, but, you couldn’t really use them for personal use, that was more to help purchase things for schools they needed, similar to the Campbell Soup Labels. There was a way you could use the box tops for personal use but, we mostly turned them in at school.
One of my grandma's favorite treasures was Pinkie and Blueboy framed prints. She got them with green stamps and they hung in her bedroom. Not many decor items in her house but these were special. She lived to 99 2/3 with just a few years in a nursing home. I don 't know what happened to Pinky and Blueboy. I always think of her if I see one in a shop.
I made this stew this afternoon for my youngest son and my husband of 36 years and they both loved it. I didn’t put any celery, I didn’t have any but I put steamed sliced carrots in. I served it with cat head biscuits (made with lard and butter) and no dumplings. Thank you so much for sharing, everyone loved it!
Yes Tipper, my Mama saved up S&H Green Stamps...books and books. She had so many that she sent them off and got me a real pretty rocking chair for my 10th birthday. ❤ Then when I was in the 5th grade a long, long time ago I started saving Betty Crocker Coupons. My neighbor saved them for me and my Aunt Minerva. By the time I got married, I had a Onieda Stainless Flatware Set. Then I saved up for the serving spoons and the meat fork and slotted spoons. I had every kitchen utensil that they offered. Those coupons were so useful. Your soup is going to be included in my soup rotation from now on.❤
I make a soup very similar, call it refrigerator soup! Thank you so much for your simple, down-home recipes. I feel so comforted watching your videos❣️
This is very good grub on a winters day. It's much like "Amish soup". My wife and I both cook and love meals like this. Believe it or not, sometimes if you don't feel like going to the store for fresh onions, keep some onion flakes or dried onions on hand. They'll work in a pot of beans or even in chili and soup. We're like you on adding a little chili powder to soups and stews, especially vegetable beef soup. My late mother-in-law always put a can of tomato puree and a tablespoon of chili powder in her vegetable soup. We're fortunate in that we have a seed store in town where we buy spices, dried onions and garlic. Sometimes doctors will say to me, "You should lose that bay window hanging out there in front." I simply act surprised and ask them why that when they were in medical school they didn't learn that's called table muscle. Word in our family is "Never get between grandpa and the groceries."
My MIL here in southeast TN., makes an amazing version of this, called Taco Soup. It’s not difficult to make, but I can *never* get mine to taste as good as hers! She gave me the recipe years ago, but I think she was holdin’-out on me! 💯🇺🇸😉
@@CelebratingAppalachia - Hot taco soup, sprinkled with some sharp cheddar and a large dollop of sour cream. We scoop it with tortilla chips. Make your tongue slap the roof of your mouth out. 👍🏻
When I was a young mom, Hamburger Helper had a stew version with a cabbage patch stew recipe. All you added was the hamburger meat and the cabbage. It was delicious. I was so sad when they discontinued the stew variety of Hamburger Helper. So happy to get this recipe.
I miss how good the Beef Pasta kind was. I purchased it a couple of years ago to prepare for my son for the sake of nostalgia and it was NOT good AT ALL!! I ended up just making homemade beef pasta that was much better. I was so disappointed, though.
I love homemade soups. Vegetable soup with hamburger, clam chowder, string bean soup w/taters and corn dumplings, potato soup, chicken and rice with dumplings, bean soups of all kinds! Throw in some saltines, or gold fish crackers, or cornbread or whatever you want! That’s good eatin!
Wow, pot-liquor....a few years ago I met a man 100 years old and asked him to come over fir dinner and what would he like? He said, "any dish with pot liquor at the bottom", well I made him a version of Tomatoes and beef with a thinner yunmy sauce that made him do happy. I also baked him a black walnut cake, he loved it. I know he was from southeast US, but not sure. He passed in 2020 at 103 years old, what a sweet man. Thanks for bringing up such good memories, isn't wonderful what food does for our hearts.
I can vegetable soup every few years. It's one of my pride and joy recipes that looks beautiful in the jars. Years back I canned over 100 quarts. It has served us well and each can was delicious regardless of my ingredients. I add ground beef and a few odds and ends vegetables plus water and more tomatoes. We eat it with cornbread. So yummy and comforting. 😋
My mom had a Bisquick cookbook. When I went away to college, I was either on the limited or not at all on the meal plan over the 4 years. She let me take her Bisquick cookbook with me. I kept quite the grocery pantry in my room and had a fridge and small chest freezer in my room as well. I would make all kinds of yummy stuff with a microwave, toaster oven, and electric skillet! I would get a whim and make cinnamon rolls or apple crisp with bisquick and oats, but had to bake them in the floor kitchen oven. The other floor dwellers would chase me down the hall wanting what I made! 😁
Seems like it hits a lot of the same notes as Golabki (Polish stuffed cabbage), but a lot less work. I am feeling like I really want to try this! Thank you for sharing this.
Takes me back to my youth. My German grandfather would make a soup very similar. He would always make it on a Saturday, and He ALWAYS used a knuckle bone or beef shanks for flavor, he added carrots and potatoes too. Thanks for the memories.
The cabbage patch stew looks and sounds delicious! I agree with you about the memories stored in each jar of food I can. Not only of canning that jar, but I go back to helping Mama can when I was growing up.
Thank you for the receipt. Have you watched The Vannage Point? He does a lot of family names of Appalachia and where they come from. He told me my daddy’s name (Enterkin) is very rare and comes from Dumfries I nearly cried at 71 I’ve always wanted to know something about him as I lost him when I was 11.
I’m going to make this this weekend as the temps are due to go down 0-12 deg’s and this sounds perfect. I’ll use ground Turkey and leeks as substitutes. I just love 1 pot meals 😋 thank you Tipper
Looks delicious Tipper! My recipe calls for 1 cup of uncooked rice added at the end to this soup. I also add Worcestershire sauce. Anyway you make this, it’s good and seems like a healthy meal. I like to serve it with your crunchy cornbread. Yummy!
I’ll make a big batch of this tomorrow to have for the weekend. We’re getting snow on Sunday and this will be just the thing. Edit: I made a huge pot of this soup today and I’m so glad I did. It’s absolutely delicious. My family raved and for sure, I’ll be making this again and again. Gracious! Thank you for sharing the recipe.
That looks delicious! My grandmother used to can tomatoes from the garden and I really miss them. She made "chili soup" which is similar - take out the cabbage and add elbow macaroni and you have it. She got the recipe in her highschool home ec class in the 1920s.
I learned to make a stew very similar over 60 years ago. The one basic difference was the addition of potato chunks instead of the beans. I, too, still make it today and love to use my home canned tomatoes. I enjoyed your description of your feelings about using the food you canned from your garden. I love that feeling of satisfaction when I see the shining glass jars filled with the result of my labor in the garden and in the kitchen. I love your program and have shared it with friends.
I loved hearing you call your mid-day meal dinner. Our family always said Breakfast, Dinner, and Supper. We were from the country and our city cousins called it lunch. When you are working on a dairy farm you need a good hearty meal to get you through the rest of your day
My mom was a master at using bits of leftovers to make delicious soups. There was often just a "smidgen" of meat as she called it but she was able to extract maximum flavor from it. To this day I don't know how she made it so delicious.
My mom cooked this way too. Her secret for rich vegetable soups was a few tablespoons of tomato paste & a generous sprinkle of Italian seasoning blend. If you don't have this seasoning, half a packet of dry Italian salad dressing mix can work too. Just mind adding salt.
@@elmerbefuddled2156 I have heard of using tomato paste... Lydia Bastianich often does this in her cooking and toasts it a bit in the bottom of the pan. Thanks
This sounds delicious and I will definitely be making it soon. I loved the story about your Granny. I remember my Mom collecting dishes and towels from laundry soap boxes. She was always saving coupons as well to send away to get cookbooks. I still have the first ones I sent away for when I was maybe around twelve. Thank you for a wonderful recipe and a lovely video.
that looks absolutely delicious!! I love onions but they tend to hurt my stomach these days. Anything with cabbage and home-canned tomatoes would be some really good eating. Loved the back story of your mom collecting box tops and green stamps and getting kitchen gadgets for ya'll. I remember green stamps!! Oh boy tomorrow is Friday and we get to check back in with Louisa!!
I’ve made a similar cabbage soup, but didn’t add meat or beans. Looks good and with the winter storm coming it would be tasty hot soup to make. Thank you for sharing!
Was your's the one for the Cabbage Soup Diet? my Mom and one of her friends used to make that all the time. I loved it! I'm not much of a celery eater but I could eat it in that.
When my family was young and grocery budgets were tight, I would keep a ziplock bag in the freezer. After each meal, whatever tidbits we're left over and weren't enough to make another meal or side dish, I would drain or pick off the bone, etc and add into the ziplock bag to freeze. When the gallon size bag got full, I would make a pot of "surprise soup". There would be every vegetable imaginable, chicken, roast beef, bits of pork chop, and I would add in celery, onions and spices. It would have canned tomatoes added, usually chicken broth and sometimes there was even spaghetti noodles. This, surprise soup. It was always delicious. The kids liked buttered crackers or bread and butter. Nothing went to waste.
I made a big dutch oven pot of stew with hamburger & stew beef meat & mixed veggies,it was so delicious. I ate a big bowl of it with some Ritz wheat crackers. Yum 😋
oh that looks so good! I am laid up with the epizudic and that would hit the spot. I did manage to put some homemade chicken soup in the crock pot this morning. I can't wait to hear the rest of the Mountain Path chapter. Your channel and your blog are such a high spot of my day. Thank you!
Thank you for sharing! I use seasoned ground sausage with northern white beans and all you mentioned. My family loves it ~ I think more then my ham and cabbage or ham and beans!
Tipper, I have made this several times now thanks to you. Everyone I serve it to just loves it! My aunt is 95 and I am taking her some today. She just loves it! It is very pleasing to thos Georgia girl!
Looks delicious, Tipper. I loved your thoughts and emotions surrounding your home-canned tomatoes. I feel the same way. Love from Iowa ❤️ ~ Lori Parrish Niemi ~
I remember green stamps. I remember an aunt saving tons of them and turning them in for a set of pots and pans. I remember the Kroger in town had a display of the set you could get. I used to stick the stamps on little cards for her. =)
I'm so glad I've finally found somebody besides me that says dinner and supper....not use dinner to describe supper time. We were taught breakfast, dinner and supper. Lunch was something you had at school or eating from a sack as in sack lunch. Thank you Tipper!
Not sure where l learned to make it but I make something similar I call Cabbage Patch Soup. Mine just has hamburger, onion, canned stewed tomatoes, can of water, and a head of cabbage. Just cook down until cabbage is translucent. It's so good. I make it at least once a month. Leftovers are better than original. Thank you Tipper
Mom-mom made a very similar soup/stew with ground beef. She would also add frozen peas, a pint jar of sweet corn she had canned, and frozen lima beans instead of the canned beans. Rather than the bisquick dumplings on top, which my family didn't care for, she would add elbow macaroni. She never used chili powder, just salt and pepper. As you say, on a cold winter's day, it made a warming, filling meal at a very low cost
I have never made a soup with cabbage but we love cabbage and hamburger soup. I will definitely try this. My granny and her sister always canned tomatoes. So delicious. I loved them washed and warm from the sun eaten like an apple with lots of salt. They are my favorite food. Not chocolate or cake or steak, fresh home grown tomatoes. Granny and Auntie also put up a soup mix with tomatoes and other vegs. They canned it and froze it. You just added your meat and maybe some potatoes and you had a wonderful soup with all those home grown vegetables in it. I have tried and failed several times to grow tomatoes. I only had a success once with cherry ones, never got big ones.
I’m from close to the top end of the Appalachian Territory in Eastern Ohio. We just canned tomatoes about 2-3 weeks ago, and what you said about that resonated very strongly with me-I feel exactly the same way! Have been making this for a long time, but I make dumplings. There’s nothing that tastes quite like cabbage patch stew-but it’s so good, it makes even cabbage haters a quick fan of this soup :)
I live in the foothills of Appalachia in MS, my grandmother was part native American and we always ate this way. Fried squirrel dumpling, fried deer tenderloin or fried dove breast with biscuits ant gravy for breakfast was a few of my favorites. She taught me how to cook even her meal gravy over fresh homegrown sliced tomatoes, that is my favorite. Your show reminds me of her, thank you.
I make a similar soup with short ribs ,stew meat or hamburger ,potatoes,lots of onion and cabbage .I add carrots ,celery and tomatoes if I have them. No beans though i love most beans. It's so good with cornbread or even a slice of buttered light bread.
I remember green stamps. My mom and her mother would save them up in books, then go to the "Green Stamp Store" to redeem them. I'd add 2 more cans of beans, that's just me, but as you said this is just a base soup/stew so you can add or subtract as you like. Definitely will keep this recipe. Thank you for all you do to keep our heritage alive!!!
I live in Kentucky and i also like comforting foods especially on a cold snow day having a pot of homemade soup or soup beans on stove cooking nothing like it. They can all these restaurant foods they want ill take southern food any day. Thanks for sharing your videos with us it brings me joy.God bless.
Such a lovely and descriptive way you spoke of that beautiful jar of canned tomatoes. All through the video, my eyes, mind, and mouth was focused on it, wishing I could slurping/eat them straight from the jar. Yep, have the same exact soup with dumplings recipe. I also use it as a base for Cabbage Roll Soup, minus the beans, and adding rice and Worcestershire to the pot. And Corned Beef Cabbage Soup, adding roasted corn beef, potatoes, and I carrots, seasoned with ground mustard and horse radish, minus the hamburger and chili powder. Thank you so much for taking your time to share with us. I try to read all the comments!!
I'm Hungarian and Irish---cabbage is written on my DNA. Always looking for another way to cook with cabbage! I make something similar but with paprika (my Hungarian coming out) and whatever pork I have on hand (kielbasz, bacon, ground, ham). I also throw in whatever leftover veggies I have in fridge. I think I'll add beans next time! Thank you.
My Mom & Grandmother made something very similar, except their recipe used canned corned beef, cabbage, onions, canned stewed tomatoes, and roughly-chopped potatoes. They called it "Red Bess", and I know of another family that called a similar recipe "Red Bessie". Never been able to find out where the name came from.
Now I know for sure my mama was from the Appalachians.... she made this here soup for us children whenever Papa would let her in the kitchen hahahaha God Bless them...they taught me everything about the GREAT DEPRESSION and how their families survived but Mama said her being from the Appalachia they never really knew about such a thing seeing how they were poor folk anyways but very rich in spirit and knowledge on how to survive with barely nothing to begin with..that's what she told me...Papa he how ever lived in the city and struggled through what the city folks struggled be he too had knowledge from growing up on a farm and he too was of a poor family...they again taught me everything on how to survive with barely nothing...I thank God everyday that I was taught by them their knowledge and I thank God everyday for folks I have the Blessing to meet. Also have more knowledge on these here foods and the ways of the old days. From quilt making...clothes making and building a little shack home out of things just laying around...I thank God most of all that we can do what ever is needed to survive as long as we have Great Teachers of this knowledge like YOU!! Thank You for Your teachings and God Bless you with great Blessings every step of the way! Thank You so over joyed to know you and very over joyed on the Blessed memories you bring back to me . Thank You!
I'm going to fix this, it looks delicious ....thank you for sharing ....Stay safe with this winter storm that's coming this weekend .... Hugs from the North Ga Mountains
This might be your equivalent to what we simply call "homemade soup" in Eastern KY. I made some just the other day. The base is tomatoes like yours. We don't put in beans, but do add a can of corn and dice some potatoes. The meat is the big difference. We use a can of corned beef which falls apart and lends some nice texture to the broth. Like you, I prefer my soups/stews be really soupy so that it's not too dry when I crumble my cornbread in it. I love the sweetness the cabbage adds to it this dish. What a treat!
I never heard of the cabbage patch stew but it sure looks good!! I remember my mom and grandma and aunts collected S&H Green Stamps. In college I made a cabbage soup for weight loss. It supposedly took more calories to digest it than was in it.
Yes, it was called "free soup" because it was calorie free, after you digested it. The problem, for me, was that it did not keep me full for long so I would add ground beef to it. Then it was a healthy "Keto" soup.
"Quality Stamps" from Big Star in Mississippi. I swear my mom bought half our groceries and kitchenware using those things! Thanks for the great memories!
When I first got married I knew a few homemade recipes. Mom, dad/who professionally cooked for 40 years and homemade and my aunts guided me. But you had to pay for long distance calls back then/I'm 60. But I also got a subscription for Taste of Home mags for several years. I adored those magazines. Recipes articles tips, loved them. And keep them. And now I watch you and have a signed copy from the Roanoke book signing last June. Besides I worked in food service for years. Now hardly anyone to cook for. But I kept stomachs happy for years😮😅 ❤
wooo I love this! I make cabbage stew once in a week or two, and do basically a variation of the same thing. my family comes from the mountains, so perhaps that's where I get the inkling from. been vegan for a good while though, so mine turns out a bit different. I'll add a can of lentils for iron and protein, and maybe some tofu if I'm feeling fancy enough to marinate it. one of the things that really kicks the flavor up is when I get canned chipotle peppers. let those simmer with the onions and whatnot. I'll add whatever vegetables I have on hand, but usually I make it with some mushrooms.
Watching this brought back memories of my own granny making cabbage soup. There seems to be as many variations of this soup as there were grannies! My own granny made it with fatback for flavoring without the beans and meat. Usually the only other flavoring was ground pepper but she would throw in a banana pepper if she had one. Almost always served with cornbread.
My Mama made this but we called it soup because we all liked it thin too. Never had chilie powder or dumplings in it though. We used a handful of oyster crackers on top after it was done. Made enough to feed Mama, Daddy and us 4 girls and we loved it.
Soup looks delicious. I will be making this soon. My husband and I eat a lot of homemade soup in the winter. Thank you for the recipe. Take care and God bless!
Oh my goodness that soup sounds and looks so good. I love cooked cabbage anyway and all those ingredients make my mouth water. Your stories are so heart warming my friend, thank you.
Any dish that has tomatoes, cabbage and onions in it has to be good. Adding all the rest then eating it on a cold day just leaves joy in my heart. Thank you and yours Tipper.
I cook leftover hamburger vegetable soup. A pound of ground beef (cooked as you did), a cut-up onion, and 2 or 3 beef bouillon cubes or beef broth. I keep a bowl in the freezer to which I add bits of leftover vegetables from previous dinners. I add a jar of tomatoes some cabbage, if I have it, and half a bag of frozen cut-up okra. Add enough water to make it soupy. I make a skillet of cornbread to serve with it.
That was a good recipe and looked delicious. I would make this. You are a good cook with those wonderful foods. Enjoy listening and keep up the good foods.
Looks delicious. Love your channel. Mentioning Bisquick, I recently ran across a great story as to its origin. According to parent company General Mills, the idea for Bisquick was first hatched in 1930 when one of its executives, Carl Smith, had a hankering for biscuits aboard a Southern Pacific Railroad train en route from Portland, Oregon, to San Francisco. The dining car was about to close but he sat down and very shortly thereafter was served the best biscuits he had ever eaten. He knew they had not baked any the traditional way as the dining car was about to close. He asked the waiter, who said it was a quick recipe developed by the dining car chef that he used where he could make biscuits in short order. The executive went back into the kitchen and talked to the chef and in turn took the revolutionary recipe back to General Mills, who then started producing it and marketing as Bisquick. Prior to that, it took much longer to produce hot biscuits. This was a revolutionary product back then, all thanks to a dining car chef on the Southern Pacific.
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got it! :)
I will
You are such a delight to listen to and we love your stories as much as your wonderful recipes.
"I was born a coal miner's granddaughter" with mom's family from southern OH & WV. Our version is called Slumgullion, done in the oven and starts with hamburger, cabbage and tomatoes then whatever else you have. Often includes carrots, potatoes and or turnips & onions. Layered with salt & pepper to taste & baked in a lidded roaster or whatever you have that holds it all. No water added as the tomatoes & cabbage add enough for our taste but you could. We love the cabbage to begin carmelizing with the meat. Omg, so good. We serve with a hearty bread slathered in butter, perfect for cleaning the bowl at the end. Thank you for working to keep some of these great old recipes and ways to live healthy while cheaply, alive and well for another generation.
Thank you!
Glad you have great memories of your Granny. It makes your life more fulfilled. How many women today give credit to their Granny for cooking, sewing, gardening and many other things in their lives. Hope she is still with us, today.
I get celery cheap on sale and then dehydrate a whole mess of it. It stores well dry. We’ve been making this stew since childhood. My wife added more to it with her own knowledge of herbs. She’s a dynamite cook! We skip the dumplings and go with crackers. This is so healthy and delicious! Growing the ingredients yourself makes it so much better, I agree!
Great tip about the celery 😀
Sometimes I use sausage as the meat in soups. It adds a different flavor for a change. At the end of the week, I even add some leftovers and odds and ends of veggies. My Mom used to call it Friday soup. I remember her putting some leftover macaroni and cheese in it and it was yummy. Thank you for your version and your memories around the stew.
We dehydrate okra by the sack full...I always throw it in the freezer but you wouldn't need to.
Franklin, NC here...
I freeze the celery chopped, it works great too.
Tipper, your cabbage stew looks delicious much like some thing my mother used to make. With my mother and father both gone I always find it comforting to listen to your voice, you sound like home. How I miss those days. I think I will be trying your version of cabbage stew have a wonderful day, you bring much joy to this southern girl who lives among the Yankees.
I make a similar stew/soup but use chicken more often than beef. Also, I use chicken broth instead of water and sometimes add a can of Rotel to spice it up a bit... Sometimes I'll bundle up and eat it on the deck by the Hiwassee River... The cool air, sound of water rippling, and tasty hot and hearty stew makes a great combo! :)
Jerry Roberts I add Rotel tomatoes to so many things. Love em!
" bundle up and eat it on the deck by the Hiwassee River... The cool air, sound of water rippling, and tasty hot and hearty stew makes a great combo! :) " Thank you for such a warm and happy visual. I know My Day is coming! Be Blessed!
@@IShallNotBeSilent that sounds like a perfect place to eat. Stay warm and healthy.
@@terryboyer1342 Rotel is a mainstay for my cooking
I would usually use chicken broth instead of water in all my soups
Thank you Miss. Tipper.
Openings home grown/canned tomatoes is like opening a jar of the essence of summer.
I love cabbage. Was raised on it. My mom would send me and my sister to the store to get cabbage. We would walk to the store and get a head of cabbage. While we were walking home, we would tear off some of the leaves and munch on it on the way home. Still love chewing on raw cabbage for a snack.
Mother made a quick, easy, and delicious soup that I nicknamed Bachelor Soup.
It starts with a 46 oz. can of tomato juice. Next add a can of chili with beans. This contains all the meat and seasoning you'll need and one of the vegetables. Finally, add an assortment of 5 cans of vegetables. (I like peas, corn, tomatoes with okra, diced potato, and mixed veg.). Most are undrained, but drain and rinse black beans if you use those.
Now you can go wild with options. I like chopped green chilis or hominy. Maybe I have a little leftover macaroni, pot roast, fried cabbage, rotisserie chicken, or spaghetti in the fridge. Toss it in (somewhat sparingly). This soup is a little different each time I make it, but always delicious. And, it makes enough for leftovers or for freezing. Bon appétit!
Sounds amazing!
This is a variation of a soup that I make often with cornbread. It’s so good, and I love one pot meals, especially in the winter. It’s also cool to hear you refer to lunch as dinner, because my family did that when I was young. It’s been lunch to me for so long now, though, that it took me a moment to get your meaning. 😂
My grandmother also saved green stamps, and I remember helping her lick the stamps to fill the books. She usually redeemed them for some kind of kitchenware which she then kindly put into my hope chest. Decades later I still have and use some of those things.
I did the same for my own 5 kids. I got the silverware sets - I learned to do this from my mom, who did this for all of us 6 kids. (They were wedding gifts.) I remember the Eagle stamps, Green Stamps, Box Tops, etc.
Thanks for the recipe, and the video.
Yes, however green stamps were back in the 70s not in the 80s. When, you filled up the books, you could turn them in at your local grocery stores for merchandise they featured or you could go to one of the True Value Stamp Stores and use them. Box Tops didn’t start till the mid to late 70s, but, you couldn’t really use them for personal use, that was more to help purchase things for schools they needed, similar to the Campbell Soup Labels. There was a way you could use the box tops for personal use but, we mostly turned them in at school.
@@sonyafox3271 Yep, I helped my mom lick the stamps into the Green Stamp booklets. I justed Box Tops - and now they're gone, too.
One of my grandma's favorite treasures was Pinkie and Blueboy framed prints. She got them with green stamps and they hung in her bedroom. Not many decor items in her house but these were special. She lived to 99 2/3 with just a few years in a nursing home. I don 't know what happened to Pinky and Blueboy. I always think of her if I see one in a shop.
I made this stew this afternoon for my youngest son and my husband of 36 years and they both loved it. I didn’t put any celery, I didn’t have any but I put steamed sliced carrots in. I served it with cat head biscuits (made with lard and butter) and no dumplings. Thank you so much for sharing, everyone loved it!
Wonderful!
Yes Tipper, my Mama saved up S&H Green Stamps...books and books. She had so many that she sent them off and got me a real pretty rocking chair for my 10th birthday. ❤ Then when I was in the 5th grade a long, long time ago I started saving Betty Crocker Coupons. My neighbor saved them for me and my Aunt Minerva. By the time I got married, I had a Onieda Stainless Flatware Set. Then I saved up for the serving spoons and the meat fork and slotted spoons. I had every kitchen utensil that they offered. Those coupons were so useful.
Your soup is going to be included in my soup rotation from now on.❤
I make a soup very similar, call it refrigerator soup! Thank you so much for your simple, down-home recipes. I feel so comforted watching your videos❣️
Cabbage Patch Stew is new to me, Tipper, but it won't be for long. I'm adding it to my cold weather comfort food recipe file. Thanks for sharing it!
This is very good grub on a winters day. It's much like "Amish soup". My wife and I both cook and love meals like this. Believe it or not, sometimes if you don't feel like going to the store for fresh onions, keep some onion flakes or dried onions on hand. They'll work in a pot of beans or even in chili and soup. We're like you on adding a little chili powder to soups and stews, especially vegetable beef soup. My late mother-in-law always put a can of tomato puree and a tablespoon of chili powder in her vegetable soup. We're fortunate in that we have a seed store in town where we buy spices, dried onions and garlic. Sometimes doctors will say to me, "You should lose that bay window hanging out there in front." I simply act surprised and ask them why that when they were in medical school they didn't learn that's called table muscle. Word in our family is "Never get between grandpa and the groceries."
😀
Now the memory of Green stamps.Mama had a special drawer in the kitchen for collecting in the books!
My MIL here in southeast TN., makes an amazing version of this, called Taco Soup. It’s not difficult to make, but I can *never* get mine to taste as good as hers!
She gave me the recipe years ago, but I think she was holdin’-out on me! 💯🇺🇸😉
😀 That sounds like a good soup!
My family loves Taco soup. I keep the ingredients for it on hand all of the time.
@@CelebratingAppalachia - Hot taco soup, sprinkled with some sharp cheddar and a large dollop of sour cream. We scoop it with tortilla chips.
Make your tongue slap the roof of your mouth out. 👍🏻
When I was a young mom, Hamburger Helper had a stew version with a cabbage patch stew recipe. All you added was the hamburger meat and the cabbage. It was delicious. I was so sad when they discontinued the stew variety of Hamburger Helper. So happy to get this recipe.
Have you noticed that everything good gets discontinued? Patricia Gambino Harrington
I miss how good the Beef Pasta kind was. I purchased it a couple of years ago to prepare for my son for the sake of nostalgia and it was NOT good AT ALL!! I ended up just making homemade beef pasta that was much better. I was so disappointed, though.
I love homemade soups. Vegetable soup with hamburger, clam chowder, string bean soup w/taters and corn dumplings, potato soup, chicken and rice with dumplings, bean soups of all kinds! Throw in some saltines, or gold fish crackers, or cornbread or whatever you want! That’s good eatin!
Ohh your soups sound delicious show us a video of u cookin!
Celery and black eye peas . Cornbread....
Ty for another great video
Wow, pot-liquor....a few years ago I met a man 100 years old and asked him to come over fir dinner and what would he like? He said, "any dish with pot liquor at the bottom", well I made him a version of Tomatoes and beef with a thinner yunmy sauce that made him do happy. I also baked him a black walnut cake, he loved it. I know he was from southeast US, but not sure. He passed in 2020 at 103 years old, what a sweet man. Thanks for bringing up such good memories, isn't wonderful what food does for our hearts.
That Wesson oil measuring cup is an oldie. I am 69 and remember it way back.
I can vegetable soup every few years. It's one of my pride and joy recipes that looks beautiful in the jars. Years back I canned over 100 quarts. It has served us well and each can was delicious regardless of my ingredients. I add ground beef and a few odds and ends vegetables plus water and more tomatoes. We eat it with cornbread. So yummy and comforting. 😋
My mom had a Bisquick cookbook. When I went away to college, I was either on the limited or not at all on the meal plan over the 4 years. She let me take her Bisquick cookbook with me. I kept quite the grocery pantry in my room and had a fridge and small chest freezer in my room as well. I would make all kinds of yummy stuff with a microwave, toaster oven, and electric skillet! I would get a whim and make cinnamon rolls or apple crisp with bisquick and oats, but had to bake them in the floor kitchen oven. The other floor dwellers would chase me down the hall wanting what I made! 😁
Seems like it hits a lot of the same notes as Golabki (Polish stuffed cabbage), but a lot less work. I am feeling like I really want to try this! Thank you for sharing this.
Takes me back to my youth. My German grandfather would make a soup very similar. He would always make it on a Saturday, and He ALWAYS used a knuckle bone or beef shanks for flavor, he added carrots and potatoes too. Thanks for the memories.
The cabbage patch stew looks and sounds delicious! I agree with you about the memories stored in each jar of food I can. Not only of canning that jar, but I go back to helping Mama can when I was growing up.
Thank you for the receipt. Have you watched The Vannage Point? He does a lot of family names of Appalachia and where they come from. He told me my daddy’s name (Enterkin) is very rare and comes from Dumfries I nearly cried at 71 I’ve always wanted to know something about him as I lost him when I was 11.
I haven't watched his videos-will have to check him out. I'm so glad you learned something about your daddy 😀
I’m going to make this this weekend as the temps are due to go down 0-12 deg’s and this sounds perfect. I’ll use ground Turkey and leeks as substitutes. I just love 1 pot meals 😋 thank you Tipper
I love the idea of using leeks!
I use leeks too
Looks delicious Tipper! My recipe calls for 1 cup of uncooked rice added at the end to this soup. I also add Worcestershire sauce. Anyway you make this, it’s good and seems like a healthy meal. I like to serve it with your crunchy cornbread. Yummy!
Good thing to have I hear tell y’all are going to get a whole lotta snow and an ice storm.
Stay warm stay safe
I’ll make a big batch of this tomorrow to have for the weekend. We’re getting snow on Sunday and this will be just the thing. Edit: I made a huge pot of this soup today and I’m so glad I did. It’s absolutely delicious. My family raved and for sure, I’ll be making this again and again. Gracious! Thank you for sharing the recipe.
It will be good for a snow day 😀
I’ve made this for years, my aunt gave me the recipe. I had never known about the dumplings and never made them🥰. I love this soup so easy and good!
It is easy and good 😀 Thank you for watching!
That looks delicious! My grandmother used to can tomatoes from the garden and I really miss them. She made "chili soup" which is similar - take out the cabbage and add elbow macaroni and you have it. She got the recipe in her highschool home ec class in the 1920s.
I love the closeness of your wonderfull family and your great cooking is just another added bonus!! LOVE YOUR VIDEO,S!
This looks so good. And I have all the ingredients. Thanks for posting all you do. My husband and I enjoy watching your channel together.
Thanks so much 😀
I learned to make a stew very similar over 60 years ago. The one basic difference was the addition of potato chunks instead of the beans. I, too, still make it today and love to use my home canned tomatoes. I enjoyed your description of your feelings about using the food you canned from your garden. I love that feeling of satisfaction when I see the shining glass jars filled with the result of my labor in the garden and in the kitchen. I love your program and have shared it with friends.
I loved hearing you call your mid-day meal dinner. Our family always said Breakfast, Dinner, and Supper. We were from the country and our city cousins called it lunch. When you are working on a dairy farm you need a good hearty meal to get you through the rest of your day
My mom was a master at using bits of leftovers to make delicious soups. There was often just a "smidgen" of meat as she called it but she was able to extract maximum flavor from it. To this day I don't know how she made it so delicious.
My mom cooked this way too. Her secret for rich vegetable soups was a few tablespoons of tomato paste & a generous sprinkle of Italian seasoning blend. If you don't have this seasoning, half a packet of dry Italian salad dressing mix can work too. Just mind adding salt.
@@elmerbefuddled2156 I have heard of using tomato paste... Lydia Bastianich often does this in her cooking and toasts it a bit in the bottom of the pan. Thanks
This sounds delicious and I will definitely be making it soon. I loved the story about your Granny. I remember my Mom collecting dishes and towels from laundry soap boxes. She was always saving coupons as well to send away to get cookbooks. I still have the first ones I sent away for when I was maybe around twelve. Thank you for a wonderful recipe and a lovely video.
My grandma let me cook whatever i wanted too! And i love to cook. Thank u grandmas who loved us so much!
that looks absolutely delicious!! I love onions but they tend to hurt my stomach these days. Anything with cabbage and home-canned tomatoes would be some really good eating. Loved the back story of your mom collecting box tops and green stamps and getting kitchen gadgets for ya'll. I remember green stamps!! Oh boy tomorrow is Friday and we get to check back in with Louisa!!
I’ve made a similar cabbage soup, but didn’t add meat or beans. Looks good and with the winter storm coming it would be tasty hot soup to make. Thank you for sharing!
Was your's the one for the Cabbage Soup Diet? my Mom and one of her friends used to make that all the time. I loved it! I'm not much of a celery eater but I could eat it in that.
When my family was young and grocery budgets were tight, I would keep a ziplock bag in the freezer. After each meal, whatever tidbits we're left over and weren't enough to make another meal or side dish, I would drain or pick off the bone, etc and add into the ziplock bag to freeze. When the gallon size bag got full, I would make a pot of "surprise soup". There would be every vegetable imaginable, chicken, roast beef, bits of pork chop, and I would add in celery, onions and spices. It would have canned tomatoes added, usually chicken broth and sometimes there was even spaghetti noodles. This, surprise soup. It was always delicious. The kids liked buttered crackers or bread and butter. Nothing went to waste.
That's so good a cold day. Thanks Tipper.
Thanks for watching Donnie 😀
Add one thin ly sliced carrott, knuckle ginger root grated, and one tsp thyme.
I truly adore you. The cooking videos are my favorite. You remind me of a people and a time long past; It's bittersweet. Our country has lost so much.
I made a big dutch oven pot of stew with hamburger & stew beef meat & mixed veggies,it was so delicious. I ate a big bowl of it with some Ritz wheat crackers. Yum 😋
12:02…I love how happy and excited you look. Gleeful anticipation.
oh that looks so good! I am laid up with the epizudic and that would hit the spot. I did manage to put some homemade chicken soup in the crock pot this morning. I can't wait to hear the rest of the Mountain Path chapter. Your channel and your blog are such a high spot of my day. Thank you!
Sorry you're feeling under the weather! Hope you're better soon. Glad you enjoy our videos 😀
Hope you're feeling better soon! 💕
Thank you for sharing! I use seasoned ground sausage
with northern white beans and all you mentioned. My family loves it ~
I think more then my ham and cabbage or ham and beans!
I usually make beef barley soup or ham and pea soup. I've never tried this before. Looks delicious! 💜
Winn Dixie had green stamps. I loved licking them and putting in the books.
Tipper, I have made this several times now thanks to you. Everyone I serve it to just loves it! My aunt is 95 and I am taking her some today. She just loves it!
It is very pleasing to thos Georgia girl!
Looks delicious, Tipper. I loved your thoughts and emotions surrounding your home-canned tomatoes. I feel the same way.
Love from Iowa ❤️
~ Lori Parrish Niemi ~
My wife makes this,soup, all the time. It’s a variation but very similar. Love soup in the winter!😊🇨🇦
I remember green stamps. I remember an aunt saving tons of them and turning them in for a set of pots and pans. I remember the Kroger in town had a display of the set you could get. I used to stick the stamps on little cards for her. =)
I'm so glad I've finally found somebody besides me that says dinner and supper....not use dinner to describe supper time. We were taught breakfast, dinner and supper. Lunch was something you had at school or eating from a sack as in sack lunch. Thank you Tipper!
Not sure where l learned to make it but I make something similar I call Cabbage Patch Soup. Mine just has hamburger, onion, canned stewed tomatoes, can of water, and a head of cabbage. Just cook down until cabbage is translucent. It's so good. I make it at least once a month. Leftovers are better than original.
Thank you Tipper
I agree about the leftovers 😀
Mom-mom made a very similar soup/stew with ground beef. She would also add frozen peas, a pint jar of sweet corn she had canned, and frozen lima beans instead of the canned beans. Rather than the bisquick dumplings on top, which my family didn't care for, she would add elbow macaroni. She never used chili powder, just salt and pepper. As you say, on a cold winter's day, it made a warming, filling meal at a very low cost
Sounds so good 😀
I have never made a soup with cabbage but we love cabbage and hamburger soup. I will definitely try this. My granny and her sister always canned tomatoes. So delicious. I loved them washed and warm from the sun eaten like an apple with lots of salt. They are my favorite food. Not chocolate or cake or steak, fresh home grown tomatoes. Granny and Auntie also put up a soup mix with tomatoes and other vegs. They canned it and froze it. You just added your meat and maybe some potatoes and you had a wonderful soup with all those home grown vegetables in it. I have tried and failed several times to grow tomatoes. I only had a success once with cherry ones, never got big ones.
I’m from close to the top end of the Appalachian Territory in Eastern Ohio.
We just canned tomatoes about 2-3 weeks ago, and what you said about that resonated very strongly with me-I feel exactly the same way!
Have been making this for a long time, but I make dumplings. There’s nothing that tastes quite like cabbage patch stew-but it’s so good, it makes even cabbage haters a quick fan of this soup :)
I live in the foothills of Appalachia in MS, my grandmother was part native American and we always ate this way. Fried squirrel dumpling, fried deer tenderloin or fried dove breast with biscuits ant gravy for breakfast was a few of my favorites. She taught me how to cook even her meal gravy over fresh homegrown sliced tomatoes, that is my favorite. Your show reminds me of her, thank you.
I make a similar soup with short ribs ,stew meat or hamburger ,potatoes,lots of onion and cabbage .I add carrots ,celery and tomatoes if I have them. No beans though i love most beans. It's so good with cornbread or even a slice of buttered light bread.
I remember green stamps. My mom and her mother would save them up in books, then go to the "Green Stamp Store" to redeem them. I'd add 2 more cans of beans, that's just me, but as you said this is just a base soup/stew so you can add or subtract as you like. Definitely will keep this recipe. Thank you for all you do to keep our heritage alive!!!
Evening Miss Tipper almost on time. Hve a nice day.
Good evening 😀 I hope you've had a good day!
I live in Kentucky and i also like comforting foods especially on a cold snow day having a pot of homemade soup or soup beans on stove cooking nothing like it. They can all these restaurant foods they want ill take southern food any day. Thanks for sharing your videos with us it brings me joy.God bless.
Grandpaw used to grow the best tomatoes in McDowell County WV.... seeing your canned homegrown fresh tomatoes reminded me him. Thank you for sharing.
You talking about canning was pure poetry.
I remember green stamps well.
My MawMaw and mama would save all year and ooh-wee the presents we got for Christmas!
Sweet memories...
Cooking is an art. ❤️
Thank you for watching!
And baking is science
Such a lovely and descriptive way you spoke of that beautiful jar of canned tomatoes. All through the video, my eyes, mind, and mouth was focused on it, wishing I could slurping/eat them straight from the jar. Yep, have the same exact soup with dumplings recipe. I also use it as a base for Cabbage Roll Soup, minus the beans, and adding rice and Worcestershire to the pot. And Corned Beef Cabbage Soup, adding roasted corn beef, potatoes, and I carrots, seasoned with ground mustard and horse radish, minus the hamburger and chili powder. Thank you so much for taking your time to share with us. I try to read all the comments!!
I'm Hungarian and Irish---cabbage is written on my DNA. Always looking for another way to cook with cabbage! I make something similar but with paprika (my Hungarian coming out) and whatever pork I have on hand (kielbasz, bacon, ground, ham). I also throw in whatever leftover veggies I have in fridge. I think I'll add beans next time! Thank you.
My Mom & Grandmother made something very similar, except their recipe used canned corned beef, cabbage, onions, canned stewed tomatoes, and roughly-chopped potatoes. They called it "Red Bess", and I know of another family that called a similar recipe "Red Bessie". Never been able to find out where the name came from.
Now I know for sure my mama was from the Appalachians.... she made this here soup for us children whenever Papa would let her in the kitchen hahahaha God Bless them...they taught me everything about the GREAT DEPRESSION and how their families survived but Mama said her being from the Appalachia they never really knew about such a thing seeing how they were poor folk anyways but very rich in spirit and knowledge on how to survive with barely nothing to begin with..that's what she told me...Papa he how ever lived in the city and struggled through what the city folks struggled be he too had knowledge from growing up on a farm and he too was of a poor family...they again taught me everything on how to survive with barely nothing...I thank God everyday that I was taught by them their knowledge and I thank God everyday for folks I have the Blessing to meet. Also have more knowledge on these here foods and the ways of the old days. From quilt making...clothes making and building a little shack home out of things just laying around...I thank God most of all that we can do what ever is needed to survive as long as we have Great Teachers of this knowledge like YOU!! Thank You for Your teachings and God Bless you with great Blessings every step of the way! Thank You so over joyed to know you and very over joyed on the Blessed memories you bring back to me . Thank You!
Such wonderful memories 😀 Glad you had them!!
I'm going to fix this, it looks delicious ....thank you for sharing ....Stay safe with this winter storm that's coming this weekend .... Hugs from the North Ga Mountains
Making it tomorrow. I get stuck sometimes with my cooking and need a pleasant reminder of what to cook. I haven't made this in years..........Thanks!
I make cabbage patch stew with beef kielbasa & also ground beef in it. Its so good.😋
This might be your equivalent to what we simply call "homemade soup" in Eastern KY. I made some just the other day. The base is tomatoes like yours. We don't put in beans, but do add a can of corn and dice some potatoes. The meat is the big difference. We use a can of corned beef which falls apart and lends some nice texture to the broth. Like you, I prefer my soups/stews be really soupy so that it's not too dry when I crumble my cornbread in it. I love the sweetness the cabbage adds to it this dish. What a treat!
I never heard of the cabbage patch stew but it sure looks good!! I remember my mom and grandma and aunts collected S&H Green Stamps. In college I made a cabbage soup for weight loss. It supposedly took more calories to digest it than was in it.
Yes, it was called "free soup" because it was calorie free, after you digested it. The problem, for me, was that it did not keep me full for long so I would add ground beef to it. Then it was a healthy "Keto" soup.
"Quality Stamps" from Big Star in Mississippi. I swear my mom bought half our groceries and kitchenware using those things! Thanks for the great memories!
I cook cabbage stew quit often, never used the celery. We always enjoy it with cornbread, never fixed the dumplings with it. Thanks for sharing.
When I first got married I knew a few homemade recipes. Mom, dad/who professionally cooked for 40 years and homemade and my aunts guided me. But you had to pay for long distance calls back then/I'm 60. But I also got a subscription for Taste of Home mags for several years. I adored those magazines. Recipes articles tips, loved them. And keep them. And now I watch you and have a signed copy from the Roanoke book signing last June. Besides I worked in food service for years. Now hardly anyone to cook for. But I kept stomachs happy for years😮😅 ❤
You are so kind! I used to love those magazines too 😊
I think I've heard of this before. Grew up in Eastern Kentucky.
Thank you for watching 😀 It's a tasty stew 😀
wooo I love this! I make cabbage stew once in a week or two, and do basically a variation of the same thing. my family comes from the mountains, so perhaps that's where I get the inkling from. been vegan for a good while though, so mine turns out a bit different. I'll add a can of lentils for iron and protein, and maybe some tofu if I'm feeling fancy enough to marinate it. one of the things that really kicks the flavor up is when I get canned chipotle peppers. let those simmer with the onions and whatnot. I'll add whatever vegetables I have on hand, but usually I make it with some mushrooms.
Sounds wonderful 😀
This will be good this weekend coming up if we get the snow there talking about. Thank you for sharing.
I'm hoping we get some at least 😀
I remember eating that when my grandma was with us. Thanks for the memories.
Watching this brought back memories of my own granny making cabbage soup. There seems to be as many variations of this soup as there were grannies! My own granny made it with fatback for flavoring without the beans and meat. Usually the only other flavoring was ground pepper but she would throw in a banana pepper if she had one. Almost always served with cornbread.
My Mama made this but we called it soup because we all liked it thin too. Never had chilie powder or dumplings in it though. We used a handful of oyster crackers on top after it was done. Made enough to feed Mama, Daddy and us 4 girls and we loved it.
Cabbage Patch Stew is a favorite of mine. I had no idea it was such an old recipe.
Soup looks delicious. I will be making this soon. My husband and I eat a lot of homemade soup in the winter. Thank you for the recipe. Take care and God bless!
Oh my goodness that soup sounds and looks so good. I love cooked cabbage anyway and all those ingredients make my mouth water. Your stories are so heart warming my friend, thank you.
My mom would make this soup with her leftover Sunday roast. So yummy especially on a cold winters day 😋 Thank you for sharing!
My momma saved the green stamps from gas station and collected the Corning ware mix bowls and casserole dishes 😁 I have and use those now
That soup looks so good. Got to try it soon.thanks tipper.
Hope you enjoy 😀
Any dish that has tomatoes, cabbage and onions in it has to be good. Adding all the rest then eating it on a cold day just leaves joy in my heart. Thank you and yours Tipper.
I love Revere Ware. I have a combination of three sets; mine from 48 years ago, my mother and mother in laws from the 50’s. Still great.
I cook leftover hamburger vegetable soup. A pound of ground beef (cooked as you did), a cut-up onion, and 2 or 3 beef bouillon cubes or beef broth. I keep a bowl in the freezer to which I add bits of leftover vegetables from previous dinners. I add a jar of tomatoes some cabbage, if I have it, and half a bag of frozen cut-up okra. Add enough water to make it soupy. I make a skillet of cornbread to serve with it.
That was a good recipe and looked delicious. I would make this. You are a good cook with those wonderful foods. Enjoy listening and keep up the good foods.
Looks delicious. Love your channel. Mentioning Bisquick, I recently ran across a great story as to its origin. According to parent company General Mills, the idea for Bisquick was first hatched in 1930 when one of its executives, Carl Smith, had a hankering for biscuits aboard a Southern Pacific Railroad train en route from Portland, Oregon, to San Francisco. The dining car was about to close but he sat down and very shortly thereafter was served the best biscuits he had ever eaten. He knew they had not baked any the traditional way as the dining car was about to close. He asked the waiter, who said it was a quick recipe developed by the dining car chef that he used where he could make biscuits in short order. The executive went back into the kitchen and talked to the chef and in turn took the revolutionary recipe back to General Mills, who then started producing it and marketing as Bisquick. Prior to that, it took much longer to produce hot biscuits. This was a revolutionary product back then, all thanks to a dining car chef on the Southern Pacific.
Fascinating! Thank you for sharing that history 😀