Braised red cabbage with chestnuts and red wine (tuscan)

Yield: 6 Servings

Measure Ingredient
2 ounces Dried porcini mushrooms; soaked
3 tablespoons Extra-virgin olive oil
1 medium Onion; minced
2½ pounds Red cabbage 1-medium; cored and shredded
1½ cup Dry red wine
1½ cup Vegetable broth
2 tablespoons Red wine vinegar
¼ teaspoon Freshly grated nutmeg
½ teaspoon Salt
\N \N Freshly ground black pepper
2 pounds Chestnuts; parboiled

1. CHESTNUTS: Parboil for ten minutes, and remove the outer and inner skins. Soak the MUSHROOMS in warm water for 1 hour. Reserving the liquid, drain, rinse, squeeze "dry" and mince the mushrooms. Filter the liquid and set aside.

2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 3. In a heavy 3-quart oven dish that has a tightly fitting cover, heat the oil and saute the mushrooms and onion for 5 minutes over low heat, stirring frequently until the onions are soft and buttery. Stir in the cabbage and Cook for 10 minutes.

Add the wine, broth, vinegar, nutmeg, salt, and a generous grinding of peper. Cover and place in the oven for 2 hours. Make sure that the liquids are not cooking too fast; if so, add more broth.

4. Gently stir in the chestnuts and cook, covered, for another hour or until the cabbage is tender and most of the liquid absorbed. Adjust seasoning and serve.

SERVES 6, after 4-¼ hours, easy. mc-PER SERVING 23% cff: 457cals; 11g fat MAKE AHEAD: Chestnuts can be skinned 1 day in advance. There are several different kinds of chestnuts (Castanea), at least three of which have edible fruits as fruit or vegetable, as well as in the form of ground flour from which they make cakes, bread, polenta, and crepes.

TIP : Chestnuts are available from October through January. Chestnuts should be firm, smooth, full, shiny and vividly brown. To prepare for this recipe: make a cross on the flat side of each nut with a sharp knife.

Roast, boil, or bake until flesh is tender. To peel, parboil for 10 minutes, remove inner and outer skin.

>"Cavolo in Umido con Vino Rosso e Castagne," from SOLO VERDURA, by Anne Bianchi (Ecco, 1997). >Edited by Pat Hanneman 3/98 ANNE-STORY: "True Tuscan connoisseurs (of red cabbage) always wait until school children begin wearing their wool uniforms that ... that presage the arrival of winter. Small wonder, then, that the following recipe so successfully pairs this most colorful of cabbages with the seasonal harbinger, chestnuts. To best capture the mood, serve it in a decorative earthenware casserole with plenty of sturdy bread to soak up the sauce." SCAN-STORY We "always wait until school children begin wearing their wool unison"

NOTES : Other ways to use chestnuts: Fresh chestnuts can be boiled, roasted (stovetop or oven), or grilled (Place in aluminum foil packets). Chestnut meats can be combined with vegetable broth and baked until soft, then blended with bechamel and served as a side dish. Dried chestnuts can be boiled until soft, pureed and plated with sauteed greens.

Recipe by: SOLO VERDURA, by Anne Bianchi Posted to MC-Recipe Digest by KitPATh <phannema@...> on Mar 26, 1998

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