Which preposition to use with cabbage
Parboil a cabbage in salted water; drain and stuff with chopped cooked mutton.
Chop all the cabbage from the inside and fry in hot grease with 1 sliced onion.
There were fields of tall, rank winter cabbages on each side of the road, and among the big green leaves we saw bright red dots.
Another of its headed forms, but with smooth glaucous leaves, is the cultivated Cabbage of our gardens (the Borecole oleracea capitula of science); and all its varieties of green, red, dwarf, tall, early, late, round, conical, flat, and all the forms into which it is possible to put it.
Cut the cabbage into very thin slices, put it into a stewpan, with the ham cut in dice, the butter, 1/2 pint of stock, and the vinegar; cover the pan closely, and let it stew for 1 hour.
Chop a cabbage with 1 large onion and 2 stalks of celery and 2 peppers; season well with salt and sprinkle with pepper.
There was fresh cabbage for Bunny.
And who that is convinced of this can long undoubtingly hold the original distinctness of turnips from cabbages as an article of faith?
Madame Colette Willy has never ceased to be the plain woman par excellence, who rises at dawn to give oats to the horse, maize to the chickens, cabbage to the rabbits, groundsel to the canaries, snails to the ducks and bran-water to the pigs.
To him succeeded Tacitus, who sank oppressed by the weight of rule; to him Probus, who perished in a military tumult; to him Carus, who was killed by lightning; to him Carinus, who was assassinated by one whom he had wronged; to him Diocletian, who, having maintained himself for twenty years, wisely forbore to tempt Nemesis further, and retired to plant cabbages at Salona.
Faster and faster went the cabbage down the hill, over and over, with Buddy inside, and he began to get dizzy, for he didn't know what was happening.
Chop up one head of cabbage after boiling it in salt water.
Use a little more cabbage than bread the filling.
This is Saloopthe precocious herb-woman's darlingthe delight of the early gardener, who transports his smoking cabbages by break of day from Hammersmith to Covent-garden's famed piazzasthe delight, and, oh I fear, too often the envy, of the unpennied sweep.
Pick off all the dead outside leaves, cut off as much of the stalk as possible, and cut the cabbages across twice, at the stalk end; if they should be very large, quarter them.
The girl was able to climb over the hedge into the neighbour's garden, where she hid among the cabbages like a frightened kitten.