Budget cabbage deserves more credit. It is cheap, it lasts longer than lettuce, and it can stretch a skillet dinner without making the meal feel thin.
This cabbage beef rice skillet uses half a head of cabbage, ground beef or turkey, rice, tomato sauce, and seasoning. It is filling, simple, and better than another expensive bagged salad that wilts before anyone eats it.
Budget Cabbage Beef Rice Skillet
Budget Cabbage Beef Rice Skillet
A budget cabbage skillet with ground meat, rice, tomato sauce, and simple seasoning. Prep time: 10 minutes. Cook time: 20 minutes. Total time: 30 minutes. Servings: 4.Ingredients
Ingredient: 1 pound ground beef or turkey Ingredient: 1/2 head green cabbage, thinly sliced Ingredient: 1 cup cooked rice Ingredient: 1 can tomato sauce Ingredient: 1 small onion, optional Ingredient: 1 teaspoon garlic powder Ingredient: 1 teaspoon paprika Ingredient: 1/2 teaspoon salt Ingredient: 1/4 teaspoon black pepper Ingredient: 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, optional Ingredient: 1/4 cup waterInstructions
Step 1: Brown ground meat in a large skillet and drain extra grease if needed. Step 2: Add onion if using and cook for 2 minutes. Step 3: Add cabbage, tomato sauce, water, and seasonings. Step 4: Cover and cook for 8 to 10 minutes until cabbage softens. Step 5: Stir in cooked rice and simmer uncovered for 3 to 4 minutes.Why Cabbage Works for Family Meals
Cabbage holds up in the fridge for days. It can be sautéed, roasted, shredded for slaw, stirred into soup, or used to bulk up rice and meat.
It also shrinks as it cooks, so picky eaters who complain about large leaves often do better with thin slices cooked into a skillet.
If grocery costs are a problem, use this with cutting the grocery bill without couponing and a grocery price book that pays off.
Ingredients for Budget Cabbage Skillet
Main ingredients: Use 1 pound ground beef or turkey, 1/2 head green cabbage thinly sliced, 1 cup cooked rice, 1 can tomato sauce, and 1 small onion if you have one.
Seasoning: Use 1 teaspoon garlic powder, 1 teaspoon paprika, 1/2 teaspoon salt, 1/4 teaspoon black pepper, and 1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce if available.
A large skillet matters because cabbage needs room at first. If the pan is crowded, cook the cabbage in two rounds.
How to Cook It
Brown the ground meat in a large skillet over medium heat. Drain extra grease if needed. Add onion and cook for 2 minutes if using it.
Add cabbage, seasoning, tomato sauce, and 1/4 cup water. Cover and cook for 8 to 10 minutes, stirring once or twice, until the cabbage softens.
Stir in cooked rice and simmer uncovered for 3 to 4 minutes. Taste and adjust salt. Serve as bowls or with toast if your family wants more.
How to Keep Cabbage From Tasting Watery
Do not add too much liquid. Cabbage releases water as it cooks. Start with 1/4 cup water and add more only if the pan dries out.
Season after the cabbage softens too. The flavor changes once it cooks down, and you may need less salt than expected.
If you want a brighter finish, add a small splash of vinegar at the end. It wakes up the skillet without costing much.
How to Stretch It
Add another cup of cooked rice for a bigger meal. Add beans if you need more protein without more meat. Add frozen corn if your kids like a sweeter bite.
If you have leftover skillet, stuff it into tortillas the next day or serve it under a fried egg. Leftovers work best when they become a new shape.
For more stretch meals, use stretching ground beef into four meals, one-pot lentil soup, and egg fried rice on a budget.
What Goes Wrong
The most common mistake is cutting cabbage too thick. Thin slices cook faster and blend into the skillet better. Thick chunks stay squeaky and can turn kids off.
The second mistake is under-seasoning. Cabbage needs help. Tomato sauce, paprika, garlic, and a small acidic finish make a big difference.
The third mistake is cooking the rice in the same pan without enough liquid or time. This version uses cooked rice so dinner stays fast.
Getting Five Dinners Done Before Sunday Is Over
Meal prep cuts weeknight cooking time significantly, but only if you have the right sequence before you hit the grocery store. The Meal Prep Guide ($17) includes weekly meal frameworks, a rotating ingredient list that keeps food costs under $100/week for a family of four, and the exact batch-cook order Rachel uses to get five dinners done in under two hours. Instant download on Gumroad.
Budget cabbage is not a sad backup vegetable. It is one of the easiest ways to make dinner bigger without making the receipt bigger.
For another cheap skillet-style meal, try $12 family rice bowl night or cheap five-ingredient pasta dinners.
