Chou farci is one of the great peasant dishes of France — a whole cabbage, its leaves separated, blanched, and reassembled around a savoury forcemeat of pork, veal, herbs, and sometimes chestnuts, then wrapped in muslin and braised slowly in stock until the cabbage is silk-tender and the filling is cooked through, the whole presented at the table as a magnificent, rustically elegant sphere. Every region of France claims its own version: the Auvergne fills with pork and chestnuts, Burgundy adds bacon and rice, the Basque Country uses piment d'Espelette and ham. The technique, however, is universal and represents some of the most skilled vegetable work in the entremetier's repertoire. Select a large, tight Savoy cabbage (its crinkled leaves hold stuffing better than smooth varieties). Remove the outer leaves and cut out the core. Blanch the whole cabbage in boiling salted water for 5-8 minutes until the leaves are pliable but not soft — you need flexibility without fragility. Refresh in cold water and drain upside down. Carefully separate the leaves, largest first. Prepare the forcemeat: combine 500g of minced pork (not too lean — fat is essential for moisture), 200g of minced veal, a diced onion (sweated in butter), 2 cloves of garlic, 100g of fresh breadcrumbs soaked in milk and squeezed dry, 1 egg, and generous seasoning — salt, pepper, thyme, parsley, a pinch of quatre-épices. Lay a large square of muslin or cheesecloth on the counter. Rebuild the cabbage: place the largest leaves in the centre, spread a layer of forcemeat over each leaf, then place the next smaller leaf on top, more forcemeat, continuing to reconstruct the original cabbage shape with forcemeat between each layer. Gather the muslin, twist tightly, and tie with kitchen string. Place in a casserole on a bed of sliced carrots, onions, and bacon rinds. Pour in enough stock to come two-thirds up the cabbage, add a bouquet garni, and bring to a gentle simmer. Cover and braise in a 160°C oven for 2.5-3 hours, basting occasionally. When done, the outer leaves should be deeply coloured and meltingly soft. Unwrap, slice into thick wedges at the table, and serve with the braising liquid, reduced and spooned over. Each slice reveals the beautiful layering of green cabbage and savoury filling — a cross-section that tells the story of the dish's construction.
Savoy cabbage for crinkled leaves that grip stuffing. Blanch whole cabbage until pliable but not soft. Rebuild cabbage layer by layer: leaf, forcemeat, leaf, forcemeat. Wrap tightly in muslin and tie with string. Braise at 160°C for 2.5-3 hours in stock on a bed of aromatics.
Instead of rebuilding the whole cabbage, individual leaves can be stuffed and rolled into parcels (petit chou farci) — easier to serve and portion. Chestnuts (cooked and crumbled) folded into the forcemeat are the Auvergne classic and add textural interest. A few slices of cured pork belly or blanched bacon placed between layers add smoky richness. The braising liquid, strained and reduced, becomes a beautiful natural sauce. Some versions add rice or barley to the forcemeat for body. In Alsace, sauerkraut replaces fresh cabbage for a fermented, tangy variation.
Blanching too long — leaves must be pliable but strong enough to hold forcemeat. Forcemeat too lean — the pork fat keeps everything moist during the long braise. Not wrapping tightly enough — the cabbage will fall apart during braising. Insufficient braising time — the leaves must be silk-tender and the forcemeat cooked through. Using a smooth-leaved cabbage, which doesn't grip the stuffing as well as Savoy.
French Regional Cooking — Anne Willan