Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (2024)

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (1)

How does this happen? How is it the end of June? Will life ever not be a blur? Is it just me?

Anyway, I hope you all are well! It finally feels like summer here in upstate New York — the kids are out of school, the weather has been glorious, the motivation to do anything but be outside is waning. All good things. Last year I chronicled as best I could my deliveries from Roxbury Farm CSA, and this year I’m trying to better organize everything.

Below are 11 recipes I find myself turning to often throughout the CSA season. Up above in the navigation under Recipes → CSA Recipes, you will find tabs for Cabbage, Kale, Potato, Radish, Sweet Potato, Swiss chard, and Zucchini. I’ll add other vegetable categories soon.

What have you all been cooking? Let me know! Loved hearing your CSA-recipe ideas last summer.

1. Shallot Vinaigrette.

This is the dressing I make most often, and these days I only make the large batch version, as it is so nice to have on hand for salads throughout the week. (A small batch version is included in the recipe.)

10 More Salad Dressings Here

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (2)
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (3)

2. Fried Greens Meatless Balls.

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Fried Greens Meatless Balls.

Year round, CSA subscribers are inundated with greens, from kale, chard, collards, and broccoli rabe to those attached to roots: beet, turnip, kohlrabi, carrot, onion.

Sometimes it’s nice to eat these greens raw dressed in a creamy vinaigrette or simply sautéed in garlicky oil, but a really handy recipe to know is Cal Peternell’s fried greens meatless balls, which I’ve made with onion and carrot greens, kale and chard, beet greens and broccoli rabe, mustard greens, and most recently with the kohlrabi and turnip greens. Every green works.

Turnip and kohlrabi greens from last week’s CSA:
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (5)

3.Swiss Chard Fritters

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (6)

Swiss Chard Fritters.

These fritters, a Yotam Ottolenghi recipe, are in the same vein as the fried greens meatless balls. The recipe should be used as a guide and adapted to whatever greens or seasonings you have on hand.

More Swiss chard recipes here.

4. Swiss Chard Salad with Lemon, Parmesan, and Breadcrumbs.

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (7)

Swiss Chard Salad.

It never occurred to me to eat chard raw until I found this Merrill Stubbs recipe on Food52. It’s light, lemony, delicious. I find it addictive, and while I haven’t experimented with other dark leafy greens, I imagine they would take well to this same treatment.

More Swiss chard recipes here.

5. Pickles.

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (8)
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (9)
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (10)

Pickles.

Here’s my favorite simple quick-pickle recipe, which I’ve used with kohlrabi, carrots, radishes, and watermelon radishes (Warning: pickled watermelon radishes are incredibly stinky (but delicious)).

Here’s another simple pickle for turnips and beets from the My New Roots cookbook.

These zucchini pickles from the Zuni Cafe Cookbook require a little more preparation but are so nice to have on hand during the summer. Apparently, they accompany every hamburger at Zuni Café.

Regarding storage: I’ve never properly canned pickles — I’ve always just stashed them in the fridge, where, I’ll admit, they’ve been forgotten. So, what I try hard to do now, is to — wait for it — eat them! If I take out my jar of pickles while I’m preparing dinner or set them on the table no matter what I am serving, I find they get eaten.

6. Oven Fries.

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (11)

Oven Fries.

Potatoes might be my favorite CSA vegetable. It wasn’t till very recently that I discovered how good fresh, summer potatoes are, how different from the potatoes I’d been eating for years. Oven fries and oven fries alone often is dinner especially in the winter, when we have pounds of them on hand thanks to the Roxbury Farm winter CSA.

More potato recipes here.

7. Sweet Potato Quesadillas.

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (12)

Sweet Potato Quesadillas.

Often with sweet potatoes, I, like many, cut them into wedges, toss them with olive or coconut oil, and roast them at high heat until their edges caramelize. What I love about these sweet potato quesadillas is that the sweet potato is the main ingredient — for once, sweet potatoes are not a side dish. A long time vegetarian friend of my aunt passed along this recipe, and it has become one of my favorites, too.

More sweet potato recipes here.

8. Roasted Kale and Coconut (with or without tofu)

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (13)

Roasted Kale and Coconut (with or without tofu)

I wrote about this sheet pan supper recently, but before I discovered that tofu could be added to the mix to make it a meal, I had been simply roasting the kale and coconut alone. Truthfully, I’ve only ever tried this recipe with various types of kale, but one commenter noted that she had had success with cabbage, and I imagine many a dark leafy green could replace the kale. Here’s the recipe.

More kale recipes here.

9. Zucchini Bread.

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (14)

Zucchini Bread.

From fritters to pizza to sautées, many recipes make good use of an abundance of zucchini, and quick-bread is no exception. This is a longtime favorite recipe: The Best Zucchini Bread, (right up there with Mrs. Myer’s Banana Bread, aka The Best Banana Bread. Really, it is.)

More zucchini recipes here.

10. Roasted Vegetables with Tahini and Za’atar

Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (15)

Roasted Vegetables with Tahini and Za’atar.

When late fall and winter hit, root and storage vegetables make up the bulk of the farm share deliveries. With Roxbury Farm’s winter CSA, we get three 30-lb. deliveries of root vegetables, a mix of potatoes, sweet potatoes, beets, carrots, watermelon radishes, rutabaga, and sometimes a head of cabbage. Roasted vegetables are always a treat, but the addition of tahini sauce and a sprinkling of za’atar is such a nice way to spruce them up. We live on these vegetables (and oven fries) during the winter.

11. Simplest Cabbage Slaw

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Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (17)
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (18)
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (19)

Simplest Cabbage Slaw.

Last but not least: slaw. Cabbage arrives as early as those tender greens and continues through the fall and early winter. The recipe below is a simplified version of this favorite Sally Schneider recipe. Make it spicy with a few dashes of Tabasco, add herbs, add other vegetables, or just keep it simple.

More cabbage recipes here.

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Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (20)

Simplest Cabbage Slaw

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  • Author: Alexandra Stafford
  • Total Time: 15 minutes
  • Yield: 4-6 servings
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Ingredients

  • ½ cup sour cream
  • ½ cup buttermilk
  • 2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar, plus more to taste
  • 1 tablespoon sugar
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt, plus more to taste
  • 1 small head cabbage, cored and finely shredded
  • 1 small red onion, thinly sliced

Instructions

  1. Whisk together the sour cream, buttermilk, vinegar, sugar, and salt. Taste. For more bite, add another teaspoon of vinegar. Stir and taste again. Adjust with more salt if necessary.
  2. In a large bowl, toss together the cabbage and onion. Add the dressing and toss to coat. Taste. Adjust with more salt if necessary.
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
Simplest Cabbage Slaw + 10 Other Useful CSA Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What's the difference between coleslaw and slaw? ›

The real difference is that the raw, chopped vegetables in coleslaw are primarily cabbage: Napa, red, savoy, or bok choy. Slaw without the cole can feature any crunchy veggie in place of cabbage, including chopped or shredded broccoli, carrots, snow peas, jicama, and more.

How do you make Jamie Oliver coleslaw? ›

Peel the onion and shallot, and slice as finely as you can, along with the cabbage, if using. Add these to the bowl of veg. In a separate bowl, mix half the lemon juice, a lug of extra virgin olive oil, yoghurt and mustard. Pick the herb leaves and chop, then stir into the dressing.

How to make coleslaw mary berry? ›

Meanwhile, to make the coleslaw, measure the mayonnaise, lemon juice, mustard and garlic into a large bowl. Mix and season well with salt and freshly ground black pepper. Add the cabbage, carrots, celery and spring onions and toss to coat everything well. Spoon into a serving bowl.

What is traditional coleslaw made of? ›

What is traditional coleslaw made of? Traditional coleslaw is little more than shredded cabbage and a creamy dressing. This recipe adds a bit more flavor with shredded carrots and onion. The creamy dressing is made with mayonnaise, sugar, cider vinegar, salt, and pepper, for a just right tangy-sweet flavor.

Why did KFC stop selling coleslaw? ›

The fast food chain was forced to stop selling its coleslaw tubs when a supply issue meant the slaw would have to be served up without the dressing. “We are currently experiencing a supply issue with our KFC coleslaw dressing,” a KFC spokesperson said. The slaw is made up of cabbage and carrots coated in mayonnaise.

Why is KFC coleslaw so good? ›

Finely diced ingredients

Fresh ingredients are key to a good slaw, and KFC does alright for a fast food restaurant. You won't find any wilted cabbage pieces, and the carrots are nice and hard as well.

What is in Mary Brown's coleslaw? ›

Mary Brown's shreds fresh cabbage and carrots in house, and tops it with a creamy dressing. The freshly shredded veggies give you a light yet satisfying crunch while the dressing gives you the tanginess you're looking for.

Why does my homemade coleslaw go watery? ›

Cabbage contains lots of water. Alton Brown suggests salting the cabbage and letting the water drain for two hours, then rinsing the cabbage and spinning it dry before dressing it. That purges the excess water out of the cabbage before it is dressed, so it doesn't get watery.

Why does my homemade coleslaw taste bitter? ›

Cabbage Core:Issue: The core of the cabbage can be bitter, especially if it's not removed before shredding. Solution: Ensure that you remove the core of the cabbage before shredding it. Cut the cabbage in half, then cut out the triangular core from each half. Old Cabbage:Issue: Older cabbage may develop a bitter taste.

What is the best pre made coleslaw? ›

With its nice, thick dressing, Walmart's deli coleslaw is the best creamy coleslaw of the bunch. The dressing is heavy on the mayo, which makes it the best coleslaw to slather on a burger or pulled pork sandwich, and the copious amounts of shredded carrot will contribute some crunch, too.

How do you reduce the bitterness in coleslaw? ›

You could also add grated apple, finely diced pineapple, or even a sprinkle of sugar. Just be careful not to be too heavy-handed — a little sweetness goes a long way. Bitterness is another common problem with coleslaw. Sweeteners like honey and fresh fruit should also help to counteract even a stubborn bite.

What can I add to store bought coleslaw to make it taste better? ›

Add a satisfying crunch to your coleslaw

Nuts make a great addition to slaw; there are many different kinds to choose from, such as walnuts, pecans, almonds, and hazelnuts, and salted and roasted nuts will impart even more flavor. Seeds like sunflower or pumpkin seeds will also add a crunchy texture to the dish.

What is Amish coleslaw made of? ›

Amish Vinegar Slaw or Old Fashioned Coleslaw is lighter and tangier than a classic mayo based slaw. Made with shredded cabbage, onion, apple cider vinegar, and dry mustard. This is the perfect quick Side Dish that you can bring along to BBQs, potlucks, and family gatherings.

Who has the best coleslaw? ›

These 15 Fast Food Places Have The Best Coleslaw
  1. El Pollo Loco. El Pollo Loco. ...
  2. Mrs. Winner's Chicken & Biscuits. ...
  3. Slim Chickens. Slim Chickens. ...
  4. Swensons. Facebook. ...
  5. Bojangles. Bojangles. ...
  6. Raising Cane's. Yelp. ...
  7. Popeyes. Popeyes. ...
  8. Pollo Campero. Pollo Campero.
Aug 31, 2023

Should you wash bagged coleslaw? ›

Bagged or ready-to-eat, fresh-cut produce

If the product is not labeled "washed," "triple washed," or "ready-to-eat," it must be washed before eating.

Why is coleslaw now called slaw? ›

Coleslaw Name Evolution

Whatever the reason for the formation, people familiar with the food item began tinkering with its name. For instance, the Latin-based cole was substituted for cold and the spelling variant slaugh was used with cold or cole. The name was also chopped to slaw or slaugh.

Why is cole slaw not cold slaw? ›

It was commonly called cold slaw in England until the 1860s when “cole” (meaning cabbage) was revived. “Cole” originates from the Latin, colis, meaning “cabbage”, and is the origin of the Dutch word as well.

What defines a slaw? ›

Slaw is a cold salad commonly made from sliced or chopped raw vegetables, especially cabbage or carrots, mixed with a dressing made with mayonnaise or vinegar. It often includes other seasonings and ingredients, such as onions and apples.

What is the difference between cole slaw and cabbage salad? ›

While cabbage salad often consists only of one vegetable seasoned and dressed, coleslaw can include a few other ingredients like shredded veggies, fruits, or seasonings to give some variety to the dish. While both feature cabbage as the star of the show, the different dressings set the two apart.

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