Cabbage Sandwich
An easy brunch recipe

As a Russian who grew up on borsch, I have a special affinity to cabbage. I love it both raw and cooked and always try to find a new way to use it.
This recipe came to me on Facebook from several different people and I thought it was too good to be true: Too easy, just two ingredients. But I still decided to try it. So here’s the recipe:
1. Take one-fourth of a large cabbage and shred it. It’s important to shred rather than chop it because the smaller the pieces are the better.
2. Break two eggs into it. I started out with one (pictured) but realized it was not enough. Two worked a lot better.

3. Whisk it until the eggs start to foam. Season it with anything you like. People on FB used “everything bagel” seasoning that I didn’t have on hand. So I used white pepper, garlic salt, dried onion flakes and roasted sesame seeds. Whisk it again so it looks foamy and consistent like this:

4. Heat up some olive oil in an 8-inch pan (I have splurged on a HexClad pan and will never go back to anything other than that).
5. Divide the mixture into two parts (three if you want your cabbage bread to be thinner but then you risk breaking it while flipping) and pour half into the frying pan. Cabbage cooks in about 2-3 min, so it’s more important to cook through the eggs. Give it 2-3 min on each side.

6. When it’s cooked, use it as bread for your sandwich. I put on one half of it a slice of Provolone cheese, three slices of roasted turkey breasts, and a slice of Swiss cheese. Then I closed it with the second half to make the sandwich.
Now, here is the part that may be crucial: Before putting other luncheables on the pancake, cool it off in the freezer for several minutes. It will allow you to cut it evenly, without crumbling in the middle.
I was too hungry and wanted my cheeses to melt, so I used the pancake when it was hot and it indeed crumbled in the middle. And Swiss cheese never melted, as seen in the cover pic, while Provolone melted only slightly.
Oh boy, was it delicious! I savored it as long as I could, washing it down with ginger and raspberry hot tea. I also had a fruit salad of pineapple, mango, nectarines, and pears for dessert.
Obviously, if you are a vegetarian eating eggs you can stuff your sandwich with cheeses only and all sorts of vegetables. I’d definitely try tomatoes and avocados tomorrow with my second pancake that is now sitting in the fridge.
As always, I’m sorry about my poor skills of presenting the dishes. I’m more about the taste than the look. It all goes down one way anyway, right?
As long as it’s tasty and healthy, I don’t really care about how it looks. Unless I’m at a high-end restaurant where trained chefs are supposed to make their food look beautiful.
I’m just a humble home cook that has to make dishes for one and occasionally shares them with her friends and family. So don’t be too harsh with your judgments. And try this recipe to see how good it is.
Seriously, you can stop reading now. The recipe is done, I’m just trying to reach six hundred words to publish it. 24 to go, now 20.
Let me know what you think of the cabbage bread if you make it. 5 more words.
Thanks a lot!
About the Creator
Lana V Lynx
Avid reader and occasional writer of satire and short fiction. For my own sanity and security, I write under a pen name. My books: Moscow Calling - 2017 and President & Psychiatrist
@lanalynx.bsky.social
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insights
Compelling and original writing
Creative use of language & vocab
Expert insights and opinions
Arguments were carefully researched and presented
Masterful proofreading
Zero grammar & spelling mistakes
On-point and relevant
Writing reflected the title & theme




Comments (11)
I love cabbage and this looks delicious - with or without the added sandwich components. Going to the store tomorrow for a head of cabbage and will try it. Thank you!
Ooo what an awesome idea. I love that you took us through every step. Thank you for letting us in on your secret, the HexClad pan. Very informative too, revealing to us a better way to portion it to ensure its thickness and avoid breaking it. I love that you included trial and error and could conclude with which cheese would be more appropriate. I enjoyed and appreciated the photos you gave us, they worked really well with your instructions. You did very well Lana, we will always appreciate your efforts, your presentation was superb, and it looked delicious. I love a humble cook much more than a chef 👌🏽 ♥️
OMG, it looks delish and sounds fabulous!! I will try it! Here is a funny story, when we were kids, my mother tried to make cold borsch, and I don't know what happened, but it was not good, and she was angry with us for making faces and not eating it. I love beets, so weird. Maybe you could give us the way to do this.
I might try this too. Always looking for the delicious, healthy ones!
This looks good. I might try this recipe. I thought already subscribe to you, already.
Would this work with red cabbage?
But if we don't eat eggs, what can we use to hold the cabbage together? No worries, I don't care about how food looks either, as long as it tastes good hehehehe
Dear Lk - I just couldn't resist schpieling on this: My Russian Immigrant Mom - 'Home-Made' Borsch/with cold Cucumber and never without a Huge Dollop of sour cream ~ Yum...! I'm a cabbage guy to the max: Just the other day we went to the Deli and I got my usual Slaw/wit crispy Fries; along with a pint of slaw to go: Good thing I'm a Veg-e-Tarian - can't imagine paying the price for meat these days. Best eats 2/U...! Jk.in.l.a.
I do like trying new foods and ways of cooking them
I really cant make my mind up on this one. I may have to try it, except I cant eat much egg without getting a migraine and I cant see the kids polishing it off.
Sounds sooo good! I will have to try!