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Haluski is a simple rustic dish made with fried cabbage, noodles, and butter. This delicious and budget-friendly meal cooks up in minutes!
A simply delicious Eastern European recipe
Haluski is a simple, rustic dish of cabbage and onions fried in butter, then tossed with egg noodles, salt, and pepper.
It’s a recipe that almost everyone who grew up in a family of Central and Eastern European descent has enjoyed at one time or another. Chances are your Polish, Ukrainian, Hungarian, Czech, or Slovak grandmother made a similar recipe – perhaps with homemade dumplings or noodles.
Some versions also include caraway seed, sauerkraut, slices of kielbasa, or salt pork – but you can add some bacon (or pancetta for a less smoky taste) which adds fantastic flavor to the traditional Haluski recipe.
What does Haluski mean?
Basically haluski are the dumplings in this dish. Depending on the family and country, you might spell this word as “halluski,” “halusky,” or “halushki“. Polish families might call this “kluski” which is the word for any soft dumpling or noodle.
Haluski is considered to be a ‘peasant dish’ – made with affordable ingredients from the pantry and root cellar. But these simple ingredients are magical when combined together in this recipe!
Author Notes
Since posting this Haluski recipe in January 2015, it has become one of our most popular recipes of all time. It’s super easy and delicious and no wonder everyone loves it!
Our original Haluski recipe was made with pancetta instead of bacon. (That’s what you get when a Polish girl and an Italian guy get married and write a food blog together!) 🙂
Depending on the brand you buy – sometimes, the bacon flavor can overpower this simple dish so pancetta or salt pork are a less-smokey but still-flavorful options.
You can leave the meat out entirely, or swap in sausage such as kielbasa.
Over the years, we’ve also been scolded in the comments because we made our Haluski with store-bought egg noodles (for convenience) instead of making homemade dumplings. If you have the time and ambition to make homemade dumplings, this dish will certainly be more authentic.
All of this is to say that this is a very flexible recipe, and there are many options and family recipes – all are delicious!
Reader Review
“Made this dish last night and it was so yummy! I found my new favorite comfort dish. So fast and easy….love it!!” – Helen
Why You’ll Love Haluski
- It’s so simple – and SO good! Who would have thought that fried cabbage and noodles with butter, and simple seasonings would be so delicious!
- It’s a budget-friendly meal and the type of recipe you can make at a moment’s notice from items in your pantry and refrigerator.
- Haluski can be enjoyed as a side dish or a main entree. Either way, this is simply delicious comfort food.
Key Ingredients & Substitutions
- Cabbage – You’ll want to use basic, inexpensive, green cabbage for this recipe. Other kinds of cabbage could be added, but it will change up the flavors a bit.
- Onions – We use any kind of yellow onion in this recipe as it has a mild flavor. White onions can be used but it will give a much stronger onion flavor to the finished dish.
- Butter – We always cook with unsalted butter so we can control the seasonings at the end to suit our tastes.
- Bacon – This is optional, but adding some bacon gives the dish more delicious flavor. Salt pork or pancetta are other options.
- Salt and Pepper
- Egg Noodles – Store-bought egg noodles are a convenient and delicious alternative to homemade dumplings or noodles.
Special Tools You’ll Need
- Cutting Board and Sharp Knife
- Non-Stick Skillet
- Spider Strainer or Slotted Spoon
- Large Pot – To cook the noodles.
- Colander or Strainer
- Large Wooden Spoon
Cooking Tips
- We think Haluski is best when the cabbage and onions are slightly browned and caramelized.
- If you chose to use a skillet that is not non-stick, stir the cabbage onion mixture often during the ten minutes of covered cooking time to prevent sticking and burning.
How do I make Haluski?
- Fry the bacon in a large skillet until crisp. Remove bacon and all but one tablespoon of the bacon fat from the pan.
- Add onions and more butter, then fry for a few minutes.
- Add cabbage, more butter, salt, and pepper to the skillet. Cover and fry until the cabbage is tender.
- Cook the noodles while the cabbage cooks. Drain the noodles well.
- Add drained noodles and more butter to the cooked cabbage mixture. Stir to combine.
- Heat through on the stove as needed.
- Add more salt and pepper to taste before serving.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Can I make Haluski with red cabbage? Technically, you can but it will turn the entire dish a purplish color and the flavor will be a little different. If that doesn’t bother you, you can use red cabbage.
- Can I make Haluski ahead of time? Yes! It reheats nicely without impacting the flavor or texture.
- How do I store the leftovers? Store covered in the refrigerator for up to three days.
- How do I reheat the leftovers? You can fry again in the pan or reheat individual portions in the microwave.
- Can I freeze Haluski? We don’t recommend freezing it as the noodles will get mushy once thawed. But, you could fry up the cabbage and onions and freeze that mixture. Then thaw and cook the pasta fresh and combine for serving.
You might enjoy these other delicious Noodle recipes
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Haluski (Fried Cabbage and Noodles)
Haluski is a simple, rustic, and traditional dish made with fried cabbage and noodles in butter. Add bacon for more additional flavor.
Ingredients
- 4 ounces bacon, diced small (or 2 ounces of pancetta if you prefer a less smoky flavor)
- 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided
- 2 cups yellow onion, diced
- 1 1/2 pounds green cabbage, cored and cut into one-inch chunks
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
- 6 ounces dry egg noodles, dumpling or extra broad size
Instructions
- In a nonstick medium pot, cook bacon to crisp over medium heat.
- Remove bacon with a spider or strainer and leave one tablespoon of the bacon fat in the pan. Discard the rest.
- Keep heat on medium and add two tablespoons of butter and the onions and cook two minutes.
- Add another two tablespoons of butter, cabbage, salt, and pepper and cook. Once heated, add cooked bacon, cover, and cook ten minutes on medium low or until cabbage is tender.
- While cabbage is cooking, cook egg noodles per package instructions.
- Once cabbage is tender, add drained cooked noodles along with the remaining two tablespoons of butter.
- Heat to serving temperature, taste for additional salt and pepper and serve.
- This dish traditionally is served heavy on black pepper, but we will leave it up to your tastes.
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This post originally appeared on A Family Feast in January 2015 as sponsored content for No-Yolks Egg Noodles. We’ve updated the post, images, and recipes.
The original post included the following images which have been frequently stolen by scraper sites over the years. These images are the exclusive copyright of A Family Feast Inc. and are shown here as documentation of original ownership. No other sites have our permission to use these images.
The recipe sounds quite nice but I will not be back to your site because of the overly intrusive nature of the many pop-up ads, often covering parts of what I’m trying to read and constantly changing. Sites like this one is why people run ad-blocking software, but your site is even getting around that!
Thanks for your feedback John. We actually run fewer ads than most other food blogs and all are closeable by clicking on the X in the corner. The alternative to providing you with free access to our recipes would be to put the information behind a paywall. Is that something you would prefer?
Fantastic taste and easy! Thank you!
You’re very welcome Lorraine!
I’m 1/2 Polish and grew up with this dish as well. My grandmother used cinnamon in hers and I’m telling you that it is a game changer! Next time you make this dish, try it out- I think you will love it.
Sounds interesting Charity! We’ll definitely give that a try – thanks for the suggestion!
Made this dish.it was fabulous but we have left over cabbage,were going to add lobster to the dish..it will be great
Sounds interesting Patty – never would have thought to add lobster to this dish! Please let us know how it comes out!
My Hungarian grandmother taught her daughter-in-law (mymother) who taught me therecipe similar to Molly’s. No meat, no onion and sugar added which helps the carmelization. All the recipes I found before Molly’s needed bacon, onions, etc. I thought the recipe had gotten distorted in the passing down like a game of telephone. Happy to know others make the same recipe.
Thanks Carol – hope ours is as good as the version you remember!
Made the Haluski and it was delicious! I didn’t use all the butter and used bacon instead of the pancetta. It was so easy to make, too. Will definitely make again. Thanks!
You’re welcome Joan – glad you liked it!
First saw Haluski on an Aldi FB page. Thought I’d try it and found your site in a search.
Simple and enjoyable. I added grilled brat slices before serving.
Really enjoyed this dish..
Thanks Ross!
It always tickles me when you you post an ethnic dish, such as this, it’s like going to Marseille in search of “the” recipe for bouillabaisse. Everyone claims to have the authentic recipe and everyone’s is different. Pancetta! What and interesting twist. Unfortunately, while I do have pancetta, I’m afraid it appears to be freezer burnt but once this quarantine is lifted, I will have to try this, again, with fresh pancetta. Today, for my birthday dinner, I will try it with ham. I’ve tried it with American bacon, in the past, and was a little disappointed that it was so … bacon-y. It overwhelmed the browned butter taste I enjoy so. Who knows? Maybe I’ll decide to go back to meatless.
Thank you for posting this. I needed a refresher. I don’t think I’ve made it since winter 2019.
Ham would be a great option in a pinch! Hope you enjoy the recipe!
I grew up eating this with the kielbasa cabbage and noodles. It also one of my sons favorite dinners. I didn’t realize that it a was polish dish which explains why my grandmother use to make it.
Kielbasa is another great option Deena! 🙂
Hi Martha, I made this cabbage recipe last night. It is so delicious. I have Celiac so I have to eat gluten free so I used gluten free wide noodles and it was just awesomely delicious. I may try using sausage another time, I think that would be really good too. Thank you so much for your great recipe using cabbage. I get tired of eating the same thing and don’t like to cook so this was really easy and so worth the little time I spent making it.
Thanks Marilyn! So glad you enjoyed the recipe – and we appreciate knowing it is just as delicious with gluten free noodles!