Recipe

cabbage and halloumi skewers

Every September, I step up onto my soapbox to report for my self-appointed duty — one part desperate, one part cantankerous — to remind us that summer isn’t over yet. I beg us to put away the decorative gourds and pumpkin spice for just a tiny bit longer. It’s a slippery slope from “hooray, scarves!” and “look at that perfect rainbow of a tree!” to a very long winter where I forget what warmth feels like on my skin and I am beseeching us not to wish it away. Or, I struggle with change? Hm, it’s hard to tell!

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These cabbage and halloumi skewers, like me, have their feet in both seasons: a heartier, warming vegetable but with flavors that still taste like weather warm enough to eat outside. If you haven’t grilled cabbage before, you’re in for a treat. Even on the most pathetic gas grill (i.e. mine), the thick leaves get a little sweet, a little smoky, and — as we’ve learned via this charred salt and vinegar cabbage, this roasted cabbage with walnuts and parmesan, and this crispy cabbage and cauliflower salad — the more char, the better. Thin slices of salty halloumi are threaded between the chunks of cabbage and they, too, taste astoundingly good grilled. The cheese was, in fact, designed for it. Finally, we make an herby, punchy mixture with garlic, lemon, capers, and red pepper and brush it all over and then my husband and I stand in the kitchen and wolf it all down and forget why we’d want to eat anything else for dinner.

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Cabbage and Halloumi Skewers

  • Servings: 8 to 10 8-inch skewers
  • Source: Smitten Kitchen
  • Print

  • 1 cup (1 ounce) packed fresh herbs, such as chives, parsley, and mint
  • 1 tablespoon capers, drained
  • 1 large lemon
  • 2 garlic cloves
  • 1 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 1/2 to 1 teaspoon mild red pepper flakes
  • 8 tablespoons olive oil, divided
  • 1 8-ounce package halloumi, at room temperature so it’s easier to slice
  • 1 to 1 1/4 pound green cabbage, cut into 1-to-2-inch chunks

Make herb sauce: In a food processor or high-speed blender, pulse herbs, capers, finely grated zest of your lemon, salt, and pepper together until the herbs are finely chopped. Drizzle in 6 tablespoons of the olive oil with the machine running. Taste for seasoning and adjust to taste.

Assemble skewers: Cut halloumi block into 1/4-inch slices, then cut each slice in approximately 1-inch flat squares. If your halloumi is breaking a lot, you can soak the block in warm water for 5 to 10 minutes to soften it slightly, making it easier to slice.

Thread chunks of cabbage and halloumi slices onto skewers, alternating the two for the length of the skewer. Brush skewers lightly with remaining 2 tablespoons olive oil. Halve your zested lemon.

Grill the skewers: Heat your grill to a high temperature. Arrange the skewers across the grill and cook until lightly charred underneath, then turn the skewers to char the next side. Brush the just-grilled parts with the herb oil, continuing to turn the skewers until they’re charred on all sides and you’ve used all of the oil. You can put the lemon halves on the grill as well to grill them. Squeeze the lemon halves over the skewers and enjoy them as soon as possible.

No grill? You can arrange the skewers on a baking sheet and run them under your oven’s broiler, turning and brushing them as you would on the grill.

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10 comments on cabbage and halloumi skewers

  1. Miles

    Well, this looks incredibly delicious! I’ll never be sad about another charred cabbage recipe. Thanks for including oven instructions for those of us whose tiny city apartments don’t have even the smallest balcony space.

  2. hampineapple

    Not me with a head of cabbage I need to do something with for dinner. I’m assuming the garlic goes into the dressing mixture as part of the “herbs”?

    1. Andrea Vaughan

      As a family evenly split between vegetarian and omnivore, that loves to grill and hates the idea of fake meat as the sole alternatives, this looks perfect.
      Weird request, could a photo of what the cabbage looks like being chopped up be included? I’m struggling to visualise how to target the beast without ending up with tons of little bits (and coleslaw is not loved enough to use those up!)

  3. Anne Allgood

    To your thoughts about the end of summer: YES AND EVER YES. I found myself in tears one September morning at my farmer’s market, when I kept taking “just one more peach” – and then everyone in line with me started crying too! (This is real; I live in rainy Seattle.). I must weep over the last peaches and tomatoes and corn; grit my teeth through my rage, and then resign myself (thanks in part to you!) to cooking something wonderful with apples and/or butternut squash. But still: ”RAGE, RAGE, against the dying of the light!!”

  4. Hampineapple

    Made this last night. I don’t have a grill so I planned to broil it as suggested, however when I was threading the skewers even after soaking the halloumi in warm water it fell to pieces. I ended up throwing the cabbage and halloumi loose on a sheet pan and roasted it for 20 mins at 500. I broiled it a bit at the end, and it was delicious. The halloumi got a little dark, so in the future I’d add it maybe 10 mins into the bake time. Definitely making it again.

  5. Ellie

    I made this as a sheet pan bake because no skewers nor grill. 20-30 mins at 450, then finished with a quick broil. It’s freakin amazing, full stop.