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Waynesville Sauerkraut Fest exhibits no sour feelings

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Joe Belanich keeps 30 slow cookers full of cabbage rolls. St. Augustine Church is making more than 13,000 cabbage rolls for the 40th annual Waynesville Sauerkraut Festival on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 10-11. Staff photo by Justin McClelland
Justin McClelland/Staff Reporter Joe Belanich keeps 30 slow cookers full of cabbage rolls. St. Augustine Church is making more than 13,000 cabbage rolls for the 40th annual Waynesville Sauerkraut Festival on Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 10-11. Staff photo by Justin McClelland

400 artisans, 13,600 cabbage rolls make up 40th festival

By Justin McClelland, Staff Writer Updated 12:18 PM Thursday, October 8, 2009

No one can quite recall how long St. Augustine has been making cabbage rolls for the Waynesville sauerkraut festival.

A few of the experienced hands believe the tradition may go back to the first festival when it was started in the kitchen of one of the church’s priests. His recipe is still used, but instead of around 500, this year the tireless volunteers are set to make nearly 25 times that many.

The 40th annual Waynesville Sauerkraut Festival takes place Saturday and Sunday, Oct. 10-11. The festival, which last year attracted more than 300,000 people, features 400 artisans and live entertainment. But at the center of the festival is sauerkraut: boiled cabbage that is a surprisingly versatile as a cooking ingredient.

George Gehring is overseeing the production of 13,600 cabbage rolls by St. Augustine for the festival The recipe includes 5,000 pounds of cabbage, 270 pounds of chopped onion, 360 pounds of rice, 44 cases of tomato juice and more than 1,000 pounds of ground beef.

Beneath the church, a veritable assembly line — operating for 15 hours every day from Monday through Saturday — prepares the rolls. In the kitchen area, a group of volunteers carefully select the right cabbage leaf and place the beef and rice concoction inside. Outside the kitchen, 30 slow cookers are continually monitored until the cabbage roll reaches 180 degrees inside.

Leigh Harris can attest that sauerkraut also is a booster of baked goods and deserts. Her sauerkraut bark, a mixture of baker’s chocolate, pistachios and sauerkraut was the grand winner at the annual sauerkraut cooking contest held Oct. 3.

Harris, who also made a sauerkraut salsa that finished third, said the sauerkraut, when dried, lost a lot of its overwhelming flavor and retained a coconut consistency.

40th Waynesville 
Sauerkraut Festival

  • When: 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m. to 
6 p.m. Sunday
  • Where: Downtown 
Waynesville
  • Cost: Free
  • Information: (513) 897-8855 or www.sauerkrautfestival.com

Matt T. if you read the info on the festival then you would know it was not a typo. They expect 350,000!!!!
Suzi
8:23 PM, 10/9/2009
Typo....30,000 attended the festival, not 300,000
Matt T
8:05 PM, 10/9/2009
One small comment: sauerkraut isn't boiled cabbage, it's fermented cabbage, and needn't even be cooked before it's eaten. The cabbage rolls offered by St Augustine's are the absolute best - bring a BIG container to take some home with you.
rustic39
6:16 AM, 10/9/2009
If you have never been there come early saturday around 8am and you will get a good place to park. It is soooo good all kinds of food and great things to see I will never miss it!! No matter how many people are there!
a great place to be!!!
4:45 PM, 10/8/2009
dates & times
Marilee
3:30 PM, 10/8/2009
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