This slow cooker 4-ingredient poor man cabbage and macaroni is the kind of meal that quietly held my family together during the lean years. My grandma put a pot of this on almost every week when money was tight and there were more mouths than dollars, and we still ask for it at every family dinner because it tastes like pure comfort and home. It’s nothing fancy to look at—just tender, sweet, caramelized cabbage tangled up with soft elbow macaroni and plenty of butter—but it fills the house with the smell I grew up on and proves that the simplest pantry ingredients can still feel like a hug in a bowl.
Serve this cabbage and macaroni straight from the slow cooker into warm bowls with a heavy hand of black pepper on top. It’s lovely alongside sliced garden tomatoes in the summer or a simple cucumber salad with vinegar, and in colder months it pairs well with applesauce and a skillet of cornbread or a few slices of buttered toast. If you have it, a little grated cheese or a spoonful of cottage cheese on the side makes it feel extra special, but it’s perfectly satisfying all on its own as a humble, one-pot supper.
Slow Cooker Poor Man Cabbage and Macaroni
Servings: 4–6
Ingredients
1 medium head green cabbage (about 2 to 2 1/2 pounds), cored and thinly shredded
8 tablespoons (1 stick) salted butter, cut into pieces
8 ounces dry elbow macaroni
1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt, plus more to taste
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
1 1/2 cups hot water (for cooking the macaroni in the slow cooker, if needed)
Directions
Prep the cabbage: Remove any tough or wilted outer leaves from the cabbage. Cut the cabbage into quarters, cut out the core, then slice each quarter into thin shreds, about 1/4 inch thick. The thinner you shred it, the more tender and caramelized it will become in the slow cooker.
Layer cabbage and butter in the slow cooker: Place a generous handful of shredded cabbage in the bottom of a 4- to 6-quart slow cooker. Dot with a few pieces of butter and sprinkle with some of the salt and a good pinch of black pepper. Repeat in layers—cabbage, butter, salt, pepper—until all the cabbage and butter are in the pot. End with a light sprinkle of salt and plenty of black pepper on top.
Cook the cabbage low and slow: Cover the slow cooker and cook on LOW for 4 to 5 hours, stirring once or twice if you’re nearby. The cabbage should become very tender, shrink down, and start to take on golden edges where it touches the sides of the crock. It will release its own juices and mingle with the melted butter, creating a glossy, rich coating.
Check for caramelization: About 3 1/2 to 4 hours into cooking, lift the lid and stir well, scraping up any browned bits from the edges and bottom. Those golden, almost caramelized cabbage pieces are where the deep, sweet flavor comes from. If the cabbage seems dry, you can add a splash (2 to 4 tablespoons) of hot water, but it should mostly cook in its own juices and butter.
Add the dry macaroni: Once the cabbage is very soft and there are some golden brown edges, stir in the dry elbow macaroni. Pour in 1 to 1 1/2 cups of hot water, just enough so you can see a little liquid at the bottom but the cabbage is still the main component. Stir everything together so the pasta is tucked down into the buttery cabbage mixture.
Finish cooking with the macaroni: Cover the slow cooker again and cook on HIGH for 25 to 40 minutes, stirring once or twice, until the macaroni is soft and has absorbed most of the liquid. The pasta should be tender and coated in a glossy mix of melted butter and cabbage juices, with some pieces of cabbage turning a deep golden brown around the edges.
Season and serve: Give the mixture a good stir, taste, and adjust the seasoning with more salt if needed. Grind plenty of black pepper over the top; those little black flecks are part of the look and the flavor that make this feel like Grandma’s. Serve hot, straight from the slow cooker, making sure each scoop has a good mix of tender macaroni and caramelized cabbage shreds.
Variations & Tips
To keep this true to its poor man roots, I like to leave it at cabbage, macaroni, butter, and seasoning, but there are a few gentle ways you can adapt it. For a little extra richness, stir in a small handful of shredded cheddar or American cheese right at the end and let it melt into the hot cabbage and macaroni. If you have an onion to spare, you can very thinly slice it and add it in with the cabbage at the beginning; it will melt down and sweeten the whole pot. A pinch of garlic powder or smoked paprika stirred in with the salt can deepen the flavor without adding cost. For more protein, fold in a drained can of white beans or leftover chopped ham or smoked sausage during the last 20 minutes of cooking so it warms through without drying out. If you need to stretch the dish further, increase the cabbage and water slightly rather than adding a lot more pasta, which can soak up too much liquid and turn mushy. Food safety tips: Always wash your hands and cutting board after handling the raw cabbage core and outer leaves, especially if they were dirty from the garden. If you add any meat, make sure it is fully cooked before going into the slow cooker at the end, since this recipe is designed mainly to warm and soften, not to bring raw meat up from a safe internal temperature. Once cooked, do not leave the slow cooker on the warm setting for more than 2 hours at room temperature; cool leftovers promptly and refrigerate them in shallow containers, and reheat until steaming hot before serving again.