LIVING Index
Beauty
Budget Decorating
Children's Activities
Computers
Decorative Accessories
Doors
Entertaining
Faux Finishing
Finance
Fireplaces
Floors & Ceilings
Flowers & Plants
Food & Cooking
Appetizers
Beverages
Bread
Breakfast
Desserts
Dips & Sauces
Entrees
Ethnic Foods
Fruit
General Food Info
Gifts
Grilling & Barbecue
International Cuisine
Meats
Party Food
Sandwiches
Seafood
Side Dishes
Soup
Spices & Herbs
Stuffing
Table Basics
Vegetables
Other

Furniture
Handles, Knobs & Hinges
Health
Household Tips
Insurance
Lamps & Lighting
Linens & Fabrics
Non-Traditional Housing
Outdoor
Painting & Staining
Pets
Recycling
Rooms & Furnishings
Safety
Stamping & Stenciling
Themed Decor
Wall Coverings
Wall Decor
Window Treatments

BEST OF LIVING
Mold Quiz
Home Safety
Room Planner
Pet Care Guide
Weekend Projects
DIY to the Rescue
Sparkling Solutions
Organize Your Home
Ultimate Media Room
Picture Perfect Parties
Queen of Clean

SPONSOR LINKS

  • How to Make Good Coleslaw (Tested Recipes)
  • advertisement

    Click here to view a larger image.

    This is Buttermilk Slaw made with red cabbage. (SHNS photo by Jim Weber /The Commercial Appeal.)

    Click here to view a larger image.

    From front to back, these slaws are Classic Cabbage Slaw, Fennel and Apple Slaw and Fresh Cole Slaw with Fennel Seed Dressing. (SHNS photo by Jim Weber/The Commercial Appeal.)

    By Fredric Koeppel
    Scripps Howard News Service

    This probably happens to every man, woman and child in America sometime during the summer. You're at a backyard cookout, and you've heaped a paper plate with fried chicken and deviled eggs and coleslaw and potato salad, and you're sitting there enjoying the occasion -- flags, kites, badminton! -- when suddenly your plate sags and you feel a miserable dampness spread across your lap. Yes, you're the victim once again of soggy, runny coleslaw, not to mention an inadequate paper plate.

    Preparing several examples of coleslaw recently led to these conclusions about the all-American side dish that we associate with summer's al fresco dining and picnic fare:

    1. Coleslaw should be, above all things, cool, crisp and fresh.

    2. The ingredients in coleslaw should not be shredded too finely.

    3. Coleslaw should be dressed lightly.

    4. Unless specified in the recipe, some of which call for overnight refrigeration, coleslaw should be chilled briefly and served soon after it is made.

    5. Most coleslaws do not work well as leftovers.

    The principle factor in coleslaw is, of course, raw cabbage, though contemporary recipes often call for such unusual ingredients as fennel, turnips and artichoke hearts.

    Cabbage, a member of the Brassica family that includes cauliflower, kale and brussels sprouts, is not native to the New World. The German and English settlers who brought cabbage to America, where it was first planted at the middle of the 17th century, did so in order to perpetuate their traditional preparations. That means boiling for the English, for boiled beef and cabbage, and salted for the Germans, which instigates the pickling and fermentation process that results in sauerkraut.

    No one is certain when the concept of using cabbage for its uncooked crisp qualities originated, but it probably occurred sometime in the 18th century among the Dutch inhabitants of New York and Pennsylvania, because the term "coleslaw" shows up in print in the 1790s. The name derives from the Dutch koolsla, meaning "cabbage salad." Though coleslaw is best served chilled, the term "cold" slaw, which shows up sometimes, is an instance of folk etymology. "Slaw," itself, has become the generic term, and many restaurants and cookbooks now feature "hot" slaws.

    The important quality of coleslaw -- its fresh crispness -- relies on raw vegetables that don't possess soft flesh or exude juice or messy seeds. No tomatoes in coleslaw! No avocados! No mangoes! And it's best to keep things simple. We should regard with suspicion any slaw that requires more than four principle ingredients. The classic combination is cabbage and carrots, but green apples and fennel, as in the example in the recently published Recipes from Home, by David Page and Barbara Shinn, owners of the New York restaurant of that name, also offer the benison of inspired simplicity and refreshment.

    Dressing for coleslaw can be as basic as oil and vinegar or oil and lemon juice, though many dressings incorporate mayonnaise or sour cream, for a creamy quality, as well as the nutty, spicy highlights of caraway or celery seeds. The primary flaw in commercial cole slaws is that the dressing can be thin and watery, making them, first, unappetizing, and second, prone to leak through those darn paper plates.

    One of the reasons that coleslaws work best when the ingredients are thinly sliced or left fairly chunky instead of being finely shredded is that the dressing lightly coats the rough surfaces, especially of cabbage, and penetrates into crannies rather than swamping a mass of shreds in an overwhelming bath.

    Obviously, if you're traveling some distance with coleslaw, it's best not to dress it until you arrive at your destination or even just before you eat. And coleslaws with mayonnaise-based dressings should not be left out too long.

    The four coleslaws offered with this story illustrate a variety of techniques and ingredients, from the typical cabbage and carrots to the more radical green apple and fennel previously mentioned. The two examples from Recipes from Home were prepared twice in the past few weeks. The Buttermilk Slaw from Sally Schneider's The Art of Low-Calorie Cooking we have made numerous times, often serving it on a buffet with her Clove-and-Pepper-Cured Roast Pork and Warm Black-eyed Peas with Onions and Bacon. Betty Rosbottom's Fresh Cole Slaw with Fennel Seed Dressing, from American Favorites: New Renditions of the Recipes We Love was new to me.

    What's surprising about these recipes is the small amount of dressing they call for. When I poured the dressings into the slaws, each time I thought, "Uh-oh, this isn't going to work," yet with repeated gentle tossing, eventually the dressings sparely coated every slice, chuck and shred of cabbage, carrot, bell pepper or fennel.

    It's also interesting that of the four, the only one that held up in the refrigerator to serve as a leftover was Home's green apple and fennel slaw. Once most coleslaws have served their primary purpose, that is, immediately embodying all that's fresh, crisp and appealing about their natural state, they quickly become a rather squishy thing of the past.


    Classic Cabbage Slaw

    Source: Recipes from Home by David Page and Barbara Shinn.

    Ingredients:

    1 Tbs. kosher salt
    4 cups shredded green cabbage
    1 cup peeled, shredded carrots
    3/4 cup minced scallions
    1-1/2 Tbs. apple cider vinegar
    1 Tbs. granulated sugar
    1 Tbs. sour cream
    1/2 tsp. celery seeds
    1/2 tsp. caraway seeds
    Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Preparation:

    Dissolve the salt in 2 cups water in a large bowl. Add the cabbage and soak 30 minutes. Rinse the cabbage and drain well. Return it to the bowl and combine with the carrots and scallions.

    In a small bowl, whisk together vinegar, sugar, sour cream and celery seeds and caraway seeds. Add the dressing to the cabbage and toss. Season with salt and pepper. Refrigerate slaw 1 to 2 hours. Serve slightly chilled.

    Serves 6


    Fennel and Apple Slaw

    Source: Recipes from Home.

    Ingredients:

    3 tart green apples, cored and cut into matchsticks
    2 small fennel bulbs, cut into matchsticks
    1 small red onion, thinly sliced
    1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
    2 Tbs. fresh lemon juice
    Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
    2 Tbs. chopped fresh parsley

    Preparation:

    Toss together the apples, fennel and red onion in a large bowl.

    Whisk together in a small bowl the olive oil and lemon juice; add to the apple mixture and toss together. Season with salt and pepper. Let stand at room temperature.

    Add parsley to slaw, toss and serve immediately.

    Serves: 6


    Buttermilk Slaw

    Source: The Art of Low-Calorie Cooking by Sally Schneider.

    Ingredients:

    1/4 cup plus 1 Tbs. sour cream
    1/4 cup buttermilk
    1 Tbs. cider vinegar
    1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
    2 to 4 dashes hot sauce
    1-1/4 tsp. sugar
    1 tsp. celery seed
    1/2 tsp. salt
    1/2 tsp. freshly ground pepper
    1 small head of cabbage (about 1 pound), tough outer leaves removed
    1/4 cup plus 2 Tbs. chopped red onion
    1/4 cup chopped parsley
    2 Tbs. chopped fresh basil (optional)

    Preparation:

    In a small bowl, whisk together sour cream, buttermilk, vinegar, Worcestershire sauce, hot sauce, sugar, celery seed, salt and pepper.

    Quarter the cabbage and cut out the core. Slice the cabbage lengthwise into 1/4-inch shreds.

    In a large bowl, toss the cabbage with the red onion, parsley and the dressing. Refrigerate for up to an hour. Add the basil, if desired, at the last minute.

    Note: A combination of red and green cabbage works well in this slaw.

    Serves: 6


    Fresh Coleslaw with Fennel Seed Dressing

    Source: American Favorites: New Renditions of the Recipes We Love.

    Ingredients:

    1 large head green cabbage, outer leaves removed
    2/3 cup chopped red bell pepper
    2/3 cup chopped green bell pepper
    1 large fennel bulb, halved, cored, cut into thin slices
    2/3 cup tarragon vinegar
    1/3 cup olive oil
    1/3 cup sugar
    2-1/4 tsp. crushed fennel seeds
    1/4 cup mayonnaise
    1/4 cup sour cream
    Salt and freshly ground black pepper

    Preparation:

    Core and quarter the cabbage and slice thinly to make 9 cups. Combine cabbage, red and green peppers and fennel in a bowl.

    Combine vinegar, oil, sugar and fennel seeds in a small saucepan. Cook, stirring, over medium heat until sugar dissolves and mixture is heated through, about 3 minutes. Pour over cabbage mixture.

    Combine mayonnaise and sour cream and add to salad. Toss well and season to taste with salt and pepper. Cover and refrigerate for at least 4 hours or overnight, tossing occasionally.

    Note: The author calls for reduced-fat mayonnaise and sour cream in her recipe; the choice is the cook's. Two tablespoons of sugar seems more reasonable than a third-cup.

    Serves: 6


    (Fredric Koeppel writes for The Commercial Appeal in Memphis.)

    (Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.shns.com.)



    RESOURCES :
    American Favorites: New Renditions of the Recipes We Love
    Model: 1576300161
    Author: Betty Rosbottom
    (October 1996)

    To order this title from Amazon.com, click here.


    Houghton Mifflin Co.
    Boston, MA 02116
    Phone: 617-351-5000
    Email: tradecustomerservice@hmco.com

    Recipes from Home
    Model: 1885183992
    Author: David Page and Barbara Shinn
    (May 2001)

    To order this title from Amazon.com, click here.

    Artisan

    The Art of Low-Calorie Cooking
    Model: 1556702600
    Author: Sally Schneider
    (July 1994)

    To order this title from Amazon.com, click here.

    Stewart Tabori & Chang