Turkey sausages with cabbage and fennel recipe - Pamela Salzman Skip to content

Turkey sausages with cabbage and fennel recipe

People ask me all the time for more recipes that are Fast!  No, faster!  And easy!  I understand the challenges that people face when pulling together a weeknight meal, whether they are parents or not.  However, we need to put some time into our cooking.  I haven’t figured out yet how to make something in no time that’s worth eating.  But this sausage and vegetable dish is my idea of fast food.

I buy precooked sausages from Applegate Farms, which don’t contain spooky ingredients like nitrates or nitrites (hooray, no carcinogens!).  Slice up some cabbage and fennel and you’ve got yourself a quick and easy dinner.  Make extra and toss it with pasta the next day, just save some of the pasta cooking water after you drain it if you need to moisten the sausage dish up.  If you have a favorite sausage that is not precooked, I would slice it or remove the meat from the casing and sauté that first.  Remove it from the pan, sauté your vegetables and put the sausage back in.

If you haven’t cooked with fennel before, it has a fresh, licorice undertone and perfectly complements the fennel seed that is usually present in most sausages.   I use red cabbage here for color, for the extra phytonutrients that come with it and the higher C profile than green, but you can certainly use green cabbage if that’s what you have handy.  Cabbage is part of the cruciferous family of vegetables – a group that I encourage you to incorporate regularly into your diet.  These include all the cabbages and kale, broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts and bok choy.  These vegetables contain some potent anti-cancer compounds called sulphurophanes.  Cabbage also contains some cholesterol-lowering benefits as well as loads of antioxidants and anti-inflammatory nutrients.  It is also relatively inexpensive, to boot.  What are you, in love with cabbage or something? Well, maybe I am!


turkey sausages with cabbage and fennel recipe
Author: 
Serves: 6
 
Ingredients
  • 2 Tablespoons unrefined, cold-pressed extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 Tablespoon fennel seeds (optional)
  • 1 large onion, halved and sliced thinly
  • ½ red or green cabbage, sliced thinly
  • 2 fennel bulbs, tops removed and bulbs sliced thinly
  • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
  • 8 nitrate-free, pre-cooked sausages, sliced on the diagonal as small or large as you prefer. I cut each link into 4 or 5 slices.
  • ⅓ cup dry white wine
Instructions
  1. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add the fennel seeds and stir until fragrant, about 3 minutes.
  2. Add onion, cabbage and fennel. Season with sea salt and pepper and sauté until just tender.
  3. Add sausages and cook until heated through.
  4. Add white wine to deglaze the pan. Cook until wine evaporates. Taste for seasoning and serve immediately.

 

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Comments

10 Comments

  1. This was so good! I loved how all of the flavors just fused together so nicely. Anytime sausage is involved, my family will eat it and they did. I am slightly in love with fennel so the flavor that the seeds gave the dish was excellent. Easy and quick to make too. Another yummy dinner! 🙂

    • This is my idea of fast food, but it’s good for you! Happy you agree 🙂

  2. I used shredded kale in place of the cabbage, because I had kale and didn’t have cabbage. It turned out so delicious!

    • I’m always in favor of using kale whenever possible! I’m glad you thought to use it here. Thanks!

  3. Ever since you mentioned cooking with fennel, I have taken more risks. I use to only think of fennel as something you dipped in oil and black pepper or something tossed with salad. But, I tried cooking it with tomatoes and chicken and it was delicious. So I am definitely going to try this sausage dish…this will be a huge hit with Paul…thanks!

    • I’m glad to hear that! Quick note — if you decide to use uncooked sausage in this dish, you should brown it first in the pan, remove it and add it back in after you saute the vegetables.

  4. I have made this numerous times and it always get rave reviews. I love that it uses fennel! I didn’t have cabbage last time I made it so I substituted kale and it was still delicious.

  5. I made this for my friends, and they were raving about it for weeks! One thing I added was cubed butternut squash, and I served it on a bed of millet. It was a great one dish meal, and super easy. YUM!

  6. This was a really good dish. My family loved it and the recipe was very easy to follow.

  7. This is a great recipe. I am not a fan of cabbage so I have substitued the “dino” kale and spinach. It tasted great too. Another quick and easy recipe!


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I come from a large Italian-American family with 28 first cousins (on one side of the family!) where sit-down holiday dinners for 85 people are the norm (how, you might ask – organization! But more on that later …).

Some of my fondest memories are of simple family gatherings, both large and small, with long tables of bowls and platters piled high, the laughter of my cousins echoing and the comfort of tradition warming my soul.

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