Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (2024)

As promised, Part 2 of my old family recipe for Kraut Bierocks (pronounced Krowt Beer-ocks), or German cabbage burgers. Yesterday we made the quick version using crescent roll dough. Click here to findwhere you can find how to make the meat and cabbage filling.

Today we’ll do the genuine recipe for the dough pockets. To see how to make the meat and cabbage filling, look here.

Today’s post features Mr. Wonderful. Pastry extraordinaire, master dough roller, and all around good guy.

I just love him. There’s just something really wonderful about a man who can roll out dough….as in, I don’t have to!

If I ever need dough rolled, he’s the man and I adore him for having that capability that I obviously lack.

Let’s get started, shall we?

One recipe will make 12 Kraut Bierocks. I halved this recipe, due to using some of my filling to make the quick version. I am going to give you the full version in measurements, but mine may not appear correct in the pictures.

Add 2 cups ofwarm water to a large bowl. We need the water warm to activate the yeast.

Take one packet of yeast and sprinkle it over top of the warm water and give it a little whisk.

This needs to set for 5 minutes. So while you’re waiting….

In another bowl measure out 6 1/2 cups of flour.

Add 2 Tablespoons of sugar.

And also, add 2 teaspoons of salt.

Give your dry ingredients a whisk to mix them up real good.

Add 1/3 cup of room temperature butter to your dry mix.
Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (10)

Your butter will need to be room temperature and you’re gonna have to get your fingers messy on this one. Reach into the bowl with your hands and begin to smoosh the butter into the flour with your fingers.

Keeping smooshing. Until the butter mixes into the flour and becomes small crumbs.

And just in case you’re wondering, smoosh is a word…I just made it up!

Go ahead and wash off your hands, but don’t get too excited, you’re going to get them dirty again real soon!

Now you’re going to add your dry ingredients to your wet ingredients. Dump the dry ingredients into your water/yeast mixture.

Mix it with a strong spoon or spatula.

When you’ve mixed all you think you can with the spoon, get ready to dirty up your hands again. Use your hands to push the dough around in the bowl and get all the flour mixture into the lump of dough.

You want to get all the dough and flour off the side of the bowl.

Lightly flour your counter or cutting board.

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (16)

Then you want to knead your dough for several minutes by folding it over on itself and push it down with your palms. I was alone making these and couldn’t really juggle both hands kneading and the camera, but really get in there with both hands and fold and press.

When you have your dough nicely worked through and it’s in a smooth ball, take a paper towel, put some canola or vegetable oil on it, and rub it around the inside of your bowl. Plop your dough into the bowl, and turn it over once to coat the other side. This is a very light coating of oil, not heavy.

Take a tea towel or light towel, and cover your bowl. Put it in a warm non-drafty place for about an hour.

Go give yourself a manicure, pedicure, facial or if your prefer, go watch your favorite one-hour reality tv show. If you’re a man, please make it the Speed Channel or the Fishing Channel like my husband does, just to reassure yourself that you’re still full of testosterone.

Come back in one hour, and uncover your dough. It should have swelled up and almost doubled in size.

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (20)

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (21)

Before After

Again, lightly flour a cutting board or your counter.

Take your dough out of the bowl and put it on your floured board.

Enter Mr. Wonderful.

If you have a Mr. Wonderful, have him roll your dough out into a rectangle that measures 15 inches by 10 inches and about 1/2 thick. You would do two of these rectangles by dividing your dough in half but remember, I’m halving this recipe.

If you don’t have a Mr. Wonderful, you’ll have to roll it yourself . I hope you don’t get as frustrated as I do when rolling dough.

Try to square off your dough at the ends and sides. Mr. Wonderful is also Mr. Smartypants, and used a ruler.

Once you get your dough to the proper size, you can cut it into six, 5 inch by 5 inch squares. A pizza cutter worked great for this. First, cut straight down the center.

Now cut 3 even squares going across the other direction. Again, if you’re a perfectionist, you can measure, if not, just try to make them reasonably even.

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (28)

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (29)
Your corners may be a little round, but that’s okay. Do the same for your second rectangle of dough. Put your dough squares on 2 large baking sheets, with space in between each dough square.

Take a large spoonful of your fillling, and put it in the center of your dough square.

Begin with opposite corners. Draw the opposite corners together and give them a little pinch to stay.

Now take the other two opposite corners and pinch them up to the first two.

Begin pinching to seal all the seams on top of the pillow.

When you’re done, you should see no filling peeking out.

Continue doing the same to your other pillows. When you’re done, flip them over, with some space in between them so that the seams now face downward.

Aren’t they just …too….adorably yummy looking?

Let them sit on your cookie sheet for 15 minutes to rise a bit.

Pop them into a 400º oven for about 15 minutes. They should be nice and golden brown when they’re ready to take out of the oven.

Once you have removed them from oven, you’ll need to brush them with a little melted butter.

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (37)

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (38)

I know, I know, butter, calories – fat- DELICIOUS! Just look at these wonderful little pockets.

We have always loved this recipe in our family. I hope you add it to your list of fun things to make with your family!


Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burgers

Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (42)

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Author: Katie of Dishin & Dishes

Recipe type: Main

Serves: 12

Ingredients

FOR THE DOUGH:

  • 2 c. warm water
  • 1 package dry yeast
  • 6½ c. flour
  • 2 T. sugar
  • 2 t. salt
  • 2 T. butter, room temperature
  • Canola or vegetable oil for oiling bowl
  • FOR THE FILLING:
  • 1 T. olive oil
  • 1 head cabbage (green)
  • 1 large onion
  • 1 lb. ground beef
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • ½ t. salt
  • ¼ t. pepper
  • ½ c. melted butter (for brushing)

Instructions

  1. Add water to large bowl. Sprinkle yeast over top.Mix with whisk. Let set 5 minutes.
  2. In another bowl, measure out 6½ cups flour.
  3. Add sugar and salt and using whisk, mix up dry ingredients well.
  4. Using your fingers or a pastry cutter add butter to dry ingredients and mix well.
  5. Add dry ingredients into large wet ingredient bowl.
  6. Mix well with strong spoon.
  7. Switch to your hands and roll the forming dough around the bowl to pick up any leftover dry ingredients.
  8. Turn onto a floured surface and knead until the dough becomes a smooth ball.
  9. Lightly oil the inside of a clean bowl with a paper towel rubbed with canola or vegetable oil.
  10. Roll dough around in the bowl to coat lightly with oil.
  11. Cover the bowl and let sit in warm area to rise for one hour. (Dough should double in size)
  12. Remove to floured surface and roll out to two rectangles measuring 15 by 10 inches.
  13. Cut into six 5 x 5 inch squares.
  14. Preheat oven to 400º (after you've made your dough and filling)
  15. Chop cabbage, onion and garlic. Add olive oil to large skillet over medium-high heat. Saute cabbage, onion, garlic, salt and pepper in oil and cover, stirring frequently about 30 minutes. Cabbage should be soft and meat should be fully browned when done.
  16. Spoon about ½ cup of filling into center of each 5 x 5 square of dough.
  17. Take two of the opposite corners and draw them together and pinch.
  18. Take the remaining two corners of dough and pull together and pinch.
  19. Pinch all seams together tightly
  20. Flip bierock over and lightly sprayed or greased baking sheet (or use parchment paper.
  21. Let set on cookie sheet until they rise a bit (about 15 minutes)
  22. Bake in oven for 15 minutes
  23. Brush lightly with melted butter and serve!
  24. Brush with melted butter
Kraut Bierocks - German Cabbage Burger Recipe - Dishin & Dishes (2024)

FAQs

Where did Kraut Burgers originate? ›

In my time, the late 1930s and all of 1940s, it says that if you lived near a sugar beet factory, you probably were very familiar with Krautburgers, a favorite beef, cabbage, onion, wrapped and baked in bread dough. This was lunch for the Germans from Russia, who owned and worked in the beet fields.

Can you use cabbage for a burger? ›

A meal in and of itself, Cabbage Burgers are great for dinner or to freeze and keep on hand for a quick bite. Here is the recipe from Grandma, and I have also included a link to one very similar that helps speed up the prep time by using frozen bread dough rather than making it from scratch or using hot roll mix.

What does runza mean in German? ›

Many sources agree that Sally Everett invented the name "runza" although it is likely she adapted it from an existing name for the sandwich; either the krautrunz, an older, different German name for the bierock, or the Low German runsa, meaning "belly", alluding to the gently rounded shape of the pouch pastry.

Is sauerkraut actually German? ›

Sauerkraut is fermented shredded cabbage with a tangy, salty flavor. Despite the German name, it actually originated in China over 2,000 years ago.

Why is KFC using cabbage instead of lettuce? ›

KFC says change is due to a lettuce shortage after floods destroyed crops in New South Wales and Queensland. The fried chicken chain KFC has been forced to make menu changes in its burgers and wraps in Australia as the country faces the consequences of floods that destroyed lettuce crops.

Why do you soak cabbage before cooking? ›

Crisp it up: Shredded cabbage stays perky if it's soaked in cold water. This also helps cut the pungent edge. Drain well before combining with other ingredients.

What is the name of the cabbage in burgers? ›

The cabbage type big leaf in your burger is lettuce leaf. It is just like cabbage but is mostly used in western country. Now people in India especially from the metro cities and fast food chains like KFC, Subway & McDonald use it in their burgers.

Is sauerkraut Chinese or German? ›

The pungent, puckery vegetable, which we think of as essentially German, was actually carried from China to Europe by the Tartars, who went on to create a new improved version of the pickled cabbage, fermenting it with salt, rather than rice wine.

Where was sauerkraut originally from? ›

The dish sauerkraut has surprising origins in China, a place rather far from Germany (where it's most known for). Similar but Different! One of Germany's most iconic foods is sauerkraut (literally translated as 'sour cabbage').

What is the history of the cabbage burger? ›

Their origins in the Midwest date back to the turn of the 19th century, when many German Russians (Volga Germans) immigrated to the U.S. and settled along the plains of Nebraska and Kansas. They shared their love of cabbage and introduced the region to cabbage burgers.

Is runza a German food? ›

It's a German-Russian invention known as the bierock. “The late Sarah 'Sally' Everett of Lincoln coined the name Runza as an abbreviated approximation for what her family called the cocoon of dough enveloping a cooked mixture of ground beef and chopped cabbage.

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