Sautéed cabbage with sesame seeds.
My SIL makes this, which is where I learned to make it and I love it. Slice fresh cabbage thinly, making long noodle-like strings of cabbage as you slice. Thinly slice white onion to taste. I tend to use about 1/4 the amount of onion as I do cabbage, but choose the amount you prefer. Sautée in a wok or large skillet in sesame oil until the onion caramelizes & the cabbage begins to become translucent. Lower the heat as needed to avoid burning the cabbage. (Another oil can be used if you don't have sesame, however, I particularly like the taste of sesame oil.) Add a pinch of salt, pepper to taste, stir, then sprinkle with sesame seeds of your choice (I like plain, but I also like this with black sesame seeds; for variety try it with a mix of both.) Cook a bit longer to lightly toast the sesame seeds & bring out their flavor, while stirring to ensure even toasting and to avoid burning.
Serve hot as a side dish, or if you prefer as a delicious snack, or if you are like me, it might even be a main dish, depending on how much you make (and if you are in the mood to eat only veggies).
I have seen recipes for something similar that includes julienne carrots & peppers, but I have not tried this any other way, as I love it with just cabbage, onion and sesame seeds.
Cabbage in Soup
I make a lot of soup and cabbage is one of the essential ingredients in my base vegetables. So with any winter (or any other season, if you are like me), cabbage is a soup staple.
I sautée chopped onions, garlic, cabbage, peppers, celery, carrots, with a bit of salt to bring out the sweetness of the onion & peppers. Although cabbage is not one of the most common of the aromatics, it lends a wonderful flavor to soup as well as being nutritious and a good source of vitamin K, needed for healthy bones, protein formation & blood clotting. Thyme and bay leaves are also essential to my soups, as is a mixture called
Bryannas vegan chicken style broth-powder, although I often also add a spoonful or two of a powdered pepper gravy base as thickener.
There are soups called 'cabbage soup', although it is usually not the main ingredient in my soups. Cabbage soups tend to be mostly cabbage & tomatoes in my observation, but having not made soup with cabbage as it's main ingredient, I cannot attest to the deliciousness of any one such recipe, however there are a few that look pretty good on the recipe websites that can be found online.
Corned Beef & Cabbage was my signature meal as a teen, taught by my mother
I have not made real corned beef in years, since I no longer eat meat and my husband didn't seem to crave this very salty dish, so I won't belabor the point with a recipe. They are abundant on the web, anyway. But it uses a lot of cabbage and I must say, the taste of cabbage soaked with the corned beef brine was my favorite part of this dish.
I have since learned to make a seitan equivalent, but again, recipes are abundant on the web. My point is, lots of cabbage, which is delicious with the brine flavor it soaks up during the cook.