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Old-Fashioned Coleslaw Recipe

By Lorraine Thompson4 Comments. Leave another...

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This rough-chopped, peppery coleslaw tastes nothing like deli versions.

I’m a fan of short-cuts, but sometimes taste trumps convenience: For the freshest tasting, nicest textured slaw, don’t use a food processor to grate your cabbage and carrots.

Machine grating makes the ingredients uniformly mushy and speeds their quick devolution to slime. It takes exactly three minutes longer to hand-chop the cabbage and hand-grate the carrot.

It’s well worth the tiny extra effort to make…

Old-Fashioned Coleslaw

½ head of cabbage, chopped
1 carrot, peeled and grated
½ cup mayonnaise
3 tablespoons rice vinegar
1-2 tablespoons sugar
Kosher salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

  1. Peel away old outer leaves from cabbage. Chop medium fine, see photos below.
  2. Start by slicing cabbage.
    Start by slicing cabbage.


    Chop cabbage roughly.
    Chop cabbage roughly.

  3. Hand grate carrot, see photo below.

  4. In a medium bowl, mix cabbage and carrot.
  5. Choose the consistency you like for your coleslaw. I like it rough-cut.
    Choose the consistency you like for your coleslaw. I like it rough-cut.
  6. In a smaller bowl, blend mayonnaise and rest of ingredients.
  7. Pour mayonnaise mix over cabbage and carrots, stirring to incorporate.
  8. Rough-chopped coleslaw looks prettier and stays fresh longer.
    Rough-chopped coleslaw looks prettier and stays fresh longer.

    Serves 6.

Filed Under: Recipes, Salads Tagged With: Old-Fashioned Coleslaw Recipe, Rough-cut coleslaw

4 Comments. Please leave another.

  1. Karen says

    April 9, 2009 at 9:43 am

    Hi Lorraine,
    I love cold slaw. It’s kind of a substitute for Kim Chee – pickled Napa cabbage – staple dish from Korea. Cold slaw goes with everything. One ingredient I sometimes add to give it a little kick is horse radish sauce or pepper flakes. You can take a girl out of Korea but can’t take Korea out of a girl when it comes to food. 🙂

  2. admin says

    April 9, 2009 at 9:50 am

    Hi Karen:

    Mmmm…I love spicy heat in just about any food. I’ll try your variation–thanks!

  3. Juliet Lacy says

    May 1, 2012 at 6:32 pm

    I love homemade coleslaw! One teaspoon of Dijon mustard and about 1/3 cup crushed pineapple makes that perfect balance between sweet and sour. Yum!

  4. Lorraine Thompson says

    May 1, 2012 at 6:54 pm

    @Juliet: Dijon or maybe even grainy mustard would make a tasty addition indeed.

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