Deadly Sushi
Formerly The Giant Mojito
Do I have to COOK Napa Cabbage
Napa is very good raw. Has a very mild cabage flavor, and the leaf texture is more lettuce-like than cabage-like. Can use it in a regular salad, or do a salad with an asian twist adding water chesnuts, bean sprouts, snow peas, sesame seeds..... make a ginger or sesame dressing ..
I generally use the outer parts of the Napa Cabbage leaves raw and the inner white stems cooked. I actually prefer the outer parts of the leaves to lettuce for salads as it's less bitter. Here's a Filipino style Adobo Tuna Salad that I toss with chopped Napa Cabbage...
1 can solid white tuna in water, drained
1 T. Soy Sauce
1 T. Rice Vinegar
1 clove of Garlic, crushed and minced
1/4 t. ground Bay Leaf
1/4 t. Black Pepper
1/4 t. Salt
1/2 t. Sugar
1/4 c. Mayonnaise
Blend all until tuna is broken up and incorporated. Let stand in refrigerator for a few minutes. Toss with 1 lb. chopped Napa cabbage, greenish parts of leaves.
Thanks! (and welcome!)
Do you take the bay leaf out at any point?
Thanks for the kind welcome. I do not remove the bay leaf for this recipe, since it uses ground spices because it's neither marinated or cooked.
A regular traditional Filipino Adobo (pork or chicken) uses whole spices - bay/laurel, peppercorns and garlic, which are removed after a slow cooking stage, prior to finishing by pan-frying to crisp.