1/12/23
Russian Recipes Revisited: Pirozhki (Piroshki)
Every cuisine has a dish of a filling stuffed into dough. Dumplings, pelmeni, empanadas, and then there are pirozhki or piroshki. The latest ones are these wonderful baked Russian pockets of thin dough stuffed with a variety of fillings.
This past weekend my friend Jazmin and I got together to make them! This was the first time I made pirozhki, and the first time Jazmin made and tried them!
For the dough and the filling/baking process we used a recipe from Sonya. It was pretty easy to follow, but I did have to add quite a bit more flour. The dough puffed up beautifully and smelled so deliciously yeasty.
For the fillings, we made two:
1) sauteed onions, cabbage, and scallions seasoned with salt and pepper and mixed with chopped hard boiled eggs
2) sauteed ground beef seasoned with salt, pepper, and adjika and mixed with little cubes of a cooked potato
Definitely have a friend when making these because it'll halve your job ;)
I give us a B- for the crimping job, but an A for the taste!
It took longer to bake these than the recipe called for in order to get a golden brown top, and we ended up putting them under a broiler for a bit.
I served these with pickled okra and peppers, and adjika. This is definitely not authentic. My mom said she normally likes them with a bowl of broth or a cup of tea with sugar and lemon.
Other fillings: rice and chicken, potatoes with sauteed onions, or you can even do something sweet like farmers cheese with cherries.
You do you!
Labels: baking, beef, Russian recipes revisited
2/27/17
Meatless Monday: Vegan Roasted Mushrooms & Potatoes
Have only 30 minutes to make dinner tonight? I have an updated, elevated and yet simplified version of my favorite Russian mushrooms and potatoes dish.
This past Sunday marked 24 years since my family moved to United States from Russia. Time flies!
Remember my Russian Recipes Revisited series? Well, I'm adding another quick and easy recipe to it today that is perfect for a Meatless Monday dinner. Instead of boiling potatoes and topping them with sauteed mushrooms and onions, I decided to roast mushrooms and potatoes together and top them with raw onions, sunflower oil I picked up at the Russian store, parsley and a side of pickles and marinated tomatoes. You'll need less than 5 minutes hands on time, the rest is taken care in the oven.
Vegan Roasted Mushrooms & Potatoes
Ingredients
mushrooms, stems removed {use them to make mushroom stock}, caps halved or quartered depending on the size
tiny potatoes {or chop regular sized potatoes to match the size of quartered mushrooms}
olive oil
salt & pepper
sunflower oil
white onion, chopped
parsley, chopped
pickles
marinated tomatoes
Directions
1. Preheat the oven to 450F.
2. Drizzle mushrooms and potatoes with olive oil and season with salt & pepper. Roast on a cookie sheet in a single layer for about 30 minutes making sure to shake the sheet occasionally.
3. Serve with sunflower oil, white onions and fresh parsley and a side of pickles and marinated tomatoes.
The photograph above is the beauty shot. The one below is how I actually eat my food: on a cookie sheet while sitting on the couch watching TV :)
12/23/13
Sour Schi aka Sauerkraut Soup: Russian Recipes Revisited
Happy Monday! How is it already almost the end of December and the end of 2013? Time flies.
Did you miss my Russian Recipes Revisited post in November? I actually made a recipe for Plov, a rice dish with carrots and beef, but I used an inexpensive rice which cooked up to be a mushy consistency, which made for horrid photos. So I'm not sharing that one.
But I am sharing a recipe for Sour Schi aka Sauerkraut Soup with you today.
If you have trouble pronouncing borsch, I'm guessing schi will not be any easier. Lucky for you, both soups are easy to make and delicious.
Schi is a Russian cabbage soup with carrots, onions and potatoes. Sour schi (kisliie schi) is a soup made with sauerkraut. Most Russian families use sauerkraut they make themselves, which is different than the sauerkraut you buy at a store, but I went the easy route ;)
Most of the recipes for this soup that I saw on line started with beef or pork, but I decided to make mine without....until I changed my mind at the end. That's just how I roll ;)
Sour Schi aka Sauerkraut Soup
Serves 4-6
Ingredients
1 large Russet potato, peeled, cut into large cubes
water
2 teaspoons olive oil
4 carrots, peeled and chopped
1 onion, chopped
salt & pepper
32 ounces sauerkraut (I used Boar's Head)
32 ounces low fat and low sodium beef broth (or use vegetable or chicken broth)
2 bay leaves
optional: fresh dill, pulled pork
Directions
1. In a large soup pot, cover the potatoes with water and cook for about 10 minutes. You don't want potatoes to be completely cooked through.
2. In a skillet, heat the olive oil, add onions and carrots and season with salt and pepper. Saute the vegetables for 15 minutes. You want to sweat the vegetables instead of making them brown.
3. Rinse and drain the sauerkraut and add to the carrot/onion mixture and saute for 10 more minutes.
4. Add the vegetables to the soup pot with the water and potatoes. Pour in the beef broth and add two bay leaves. Bring the mixture to a boil, lower the heat and simmer for about 30 minutes. Make sure the potatoes are cooked through.
This is quite a thick soup. If you want yours to be thinner, add more liquid.
Serve topped with dill.
And here's where the pork came in: I had some leftover pulled pork (I'll share the recipe later this week), and decided to also add it to the soup: delicious!!
If you are not a fan of sour flavors, don't make this soup :)
Labels: meat, Russian recipes revisited, soup
10/28/13
Perfect Winter Soup for Russian Recipes Revisited: Beef and White Beans Soup
October is almost over, so it's time for this month's Russian Recipes Revisited post. This time I give you one of my favorite recipes that my mom has been making ever since I remember: Beef and White Beans Soup. This soup is perfect for chilly days or nights, and is quite easy to make: it just takes a while to simmer.
It's hard to believe this is the first time I've ever made this soup. It has a great beef flavor, with soft and tender white beans, root vegetables and fork tender beef. The idea to make this recipe came to me when I was talking to my little brother {ok, he's actually almost 25 years old, but he'll always be a little brother to me} and he told me he was making beef and white bean soup. I asked him to give me a list of ingredients and directions and went grocery shopping that same day. I've altered some of Misha's directions slightly and here's what I came up with:
Perfect Winter Soup for Russian Recipes Revisited: Beef and White Beans Soup
Serves an army
Ingredients
2 teaspoons olive oil
2 pound piece of beef chuck tender roast
salt & pepper
4 quarts water
1.5 cups white beans soaked overnight
1 pound carrots, peeled and cut into 2-3" pieces
6 celery stalks, cut into 2-3" pieces
1 parsnip, peeled and cut into 2-3" pieces
2 onions, peeled and quartered
10 garlic cloves, peeled
chopped parsley to garnish
{dry beans on the left, soaked beans on the right}
Directions
1. Heat oil in your largest soup pot, at least 6 quarts.
2. Season the beef with salt and pepper and brown on both sides.
3. Pour four quarts of water, bring to a boil and skim all the gunk that comes to the surface until you end up with clear liquid. This will take about 15 minutes.
4. Once you have clear broth, turn the heat down and simmer the beef covered for an hour and a half.
5. Add the beans and the vegetables. Season with more salt and pepper. After bringing the soup back to a boil, lower the heat and simmer the soup covered for about an hour, or until the beans are tender.
This is what the beef and vegetables look like after they've been cooked.
To serve, shred the beef, or chop it, and put it on the bottom of the soup bowl. Add the beans and the vegetables and cover with the broth. Garnish with fresh chopped parsley.
A FEW NOTES FROM MY MOM
1. Use a piece of meat with a lot of marbeling
2. Use a piece of meat with a bone in it.
{I disregarded both, but passing them on to you so you can do what you want.}
I must admit that this was waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay too much soup for one person, but I made it till the end of the soup pot ;) It's great with a few squirts of sriracha or even a little bit of mayonnaise.
Make this soup for your family soon!
Thank you mom for making this soup for me a zillion times, and thank you Misha for giving me the recipe. ♥
Here's a picture of Misha and me ;)
Labels: meat, Russian recipes revisited, soup
9/2/13
Honey Apple Cake Perfect for Rosh Hashanah: Russian Recipe Revisited
This Wednesday is Rosh Hashanah: Jewish New Year. Although growing up in Russia I knew I was Jewish, religion wasn't a part of my life. When my family moved to the States when I was 13 years old, we went to a synagogue a few times, but it was hard for me to all of a sudden start believing in God.
Instead, I consider myself a cultural Jew: I ♥ Jewish traditions, most of the holidays {I stopped fasting for Yom Kippur several years ago}, music and Hebrew language.
It's traditional for Rosh Hashanah to eat apples dipped in honey to symbolize a sweet year to come. I can use all the sweetness I can get! And so despite not actually really liking honey, I follow this tradition.
This weekend I decided to make one dish that would perfectly fit two categories: Russian Recipes Revisited and Jewish Holidays. This is how Honey Apple Cake came about!
Ever since I remember, my mom has been making apple cake. She actually has the recipe memorized: the woman has amazing memory. In fact, my mom knows most of the phone numbers by heart, and even before she learned how to drive she knew the routes better than my dad. Alas, I did not inherit my mom's sense of direction.
But let's get back to this apple cake. The cake is incredibly easy to make and basically has apples covered with a simple batter. I changed my mom's recipe by sauteing the apples in a bit of oil and honey to make it perfect for Rosh Hashanah.
Honey Apple Cake
Ingredients
3 eggs
1 cup sugar
1 cup flour
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon white vinegar
1 tablespoon sour cream
baking spray
2 teaspoons oil
3 large Granny Smith apples, quartered, cored, chopped
3 tablespoons honey
Directions
1. Preheat the oven to 375.
2. In a large whisk 3 eggs.
3. Add 1 cup of sugar to the egg mixture and blend together.
4. Pour 1/2 teaspoon of baking soda into white vinegar - the two ingredients will react and bubble - add to the bowl with eggs and sugar and mix.
5. Slowly incorporate the flour into the above mixture.
6. Add 1 tablespoon of sour cream to the batter and set aside.
7. Spray a Bunt cake pan with baking spray.
8. Saute the apples in oil and honey for about 5 minutes. Allow to cool and then transfer to the Bunt cake pan.
9. Cover the apples with the batter.
11. Bake in the oven for 45 minutes to an hour, until the top is golden brown and the toothpick comes out clean and dry.
12. Let the cake cool, and flip on a serving plate. Enjoy!
So the cake did not turn out perfect. Such is life. The batter did not go all the way to the bottom (which became the top) of the cake...so it doesn't look perfectly pretty.
My mom thinks that because I sauteed the apples, they became heavier than normal and did not float toward the top as the cake baked, thus not allowing the batter to sink down.
If you are going to make this recipe, you might want to pour just enough batter into the pan to cover the bottom of the pan before adding the apples and the rest of the batter.
This cake is great as dessert, but is also a perfect breakfast treat with a cup of coffee.
If you want a few alternative recipes for Rosh Hashana, try Honey Almond Cake with Orange Zest or Honey Nut Date Cake.
I hope you all have a very sweet Rosh Hashanah!
7/28/13
Childhood Breakfast Recipe All Grown Up: Polenta with Feta. Russian Recipes Revisited
July is almost over, which means one thing: it's time for another Russian Recipes Revisited post!
When I was growing up in Moscow, weekend breakfasts were always a big thing. They usually were savory, one pot/pan meals that could be shared by the entire family. One of the simplest of those breakfasts was polenta with feta that my mom made often. Yes, that's it: just a big pot of golden polenta divided into bowls and topped with chunks of feta. The feta would slightly melt and add the great salty flavor to the polenta. It was a filling and uncomplicated dish.
I've been thinking about blogging this "recipe" for a while but one thing stopped me: it would not photograph well. I'm SUCH a food blogger ;) So I decided to slightly change up my childhood favorite and make a grown up version, which would not only have stronger flavors, but also be more photogenic.
Childhood Breakfast Recipe All Grown Up: Polenta with Feta. Russian Recipes Revisited
Childhood Breakfast Recipe All Grown Up: Polenta with Feta
Ingredients
cooked polenta {I used the white Italian polenta}
crumbled feta
sun ripened dried tomato pesto
cilantro
Directions
1. Ladle the cooked hot polenta into a bowl. Top with feta, pesto and cilantro.
2. Eat.
What are some of your favorite childhood breakfast dishes that you've altered to make grown up?
6/18/13
Beet Salad with Mayonnaise & Walnuts: Russian Recipes Revisited
Beet Salad with Mayonnaise and Walnuts
{I'm not providing specific ingredient amounts because this is more to taste.}
Ingredients
beets, roasted and grated***
mayonnaise
garlic, minced {or use a microplane}
walnuts, toasted and chopped
optional: chopped prunes, chopped cilantro or parsley
***To roast the beets, wash them, drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with salt, wrap in aluminum foil and roast on a cookie sheet in a 475F degree preheated oven for at least an hour, or as long as it takes.
Directions
1. Combine grated beets with mayonnaise {use as much as you want}, garlic {ditto}, chopped walnuts and a bit of cilantro. You can also add prunes, but I did not.
2. Refrigerate this salad for at least an hour.
3. It's great as an appetizer or as a side.
Isn't the color just absolutely gorgeous!? This salad brought back so many fun memories of family members and friends sitting around the table, eating zakuski, which are salads and appetizers, and waiting for the main course.
Will you make this salad?
Labels: produce, Russian recipes revisited, salad, side, vegetables, vegetarian
5/28/13
Tvorog & Sirniki (Russian Cottage Cheese): Russian Recipes Revisited
One of the dishes she made often was cottage cheese. But Russian cottage cheese, tvorog, is nothing like the American version. There are no curds or slightly slimy texture. Instead, it resembles a dry version of ricotta.
I called my mom to ask for a recipe and went into my kitchen to make it.
Tvorog (Russian Cottage Cheese)
Makes ~ 3.5 cups
Ingredients
1 gallon 2% milk
2 cups buttermilk
Directions
1. In a large pot, bring the milk to room temperature by heating it slowly. Turn off the heat. Add buttermilk.
2. Leave the mixture on your kitchen counter for 1-2 days until it becomes the consistency of yogurt.
3. Slowly heat the mixture on medium-low heat until it separates: you will see clear liquid and white cloudy puffy "things." That's your tvorog!
4. Allow the mixture to cool and then put it through a double layer of cheesecloth. Tie it up and let it drip in the sink for a few hours. {Or you can put the bundle of tvorogi in between two plates with something heavy on top to get rid off the liquid: similar to dealing with tofu.}
Easy, right?
Well, the first time I made this recipe, it failed. Miserably. And so this Russian Recipes Revisited post almost did not happen at all. But then I decided to try again after getting a few comments from my friends and instagram. I think the key was NOT to buy ultra pasteurized milk or buttermilk. So do NOT go to Whole Foods or Trader Joe's or similar stores. Buy the regular kind. And then make this.
Second time was success.
This is how tvorog looks once it's done and drained. Isn't it pretty? I love the little design the cheesecloth makes.
Now that you've made tvorog, how to use it? Well, you can spread it on bread, mix it into pasta, add it to an omelet, or eat it with berries. Or you could make sirniki. Sirniki are patties made from tvorog. I like them sweetened with sugar and raisins.
Sirniki
Makes 4
Ingredients
1.5 cups tvorog
1 egg
1/3 cup golden raisins
pinch of salt
1 tablespoon flour
1 tablespoon sugar
oil for sauteing
sugar
sour cream
jarred cherries or fresh fruit {optional}
Directions
1. Combine the first 6 ingredients in a bowl. The texture will resemble that of uncooked matzo balls.
2. Make 4 patties.
3. In a large skillet heat the oil and saute sirniki for 3 minutes on each side.
4. Serve with a sprinkle of sugar, a dollop of sour cream and jarred cherries.
How pretty are these??? They totally made me think of home.
I hope you make this recipe and it's successful for you on the first try!!! My grandmother would have been proud of me.
4/23/13
Cheesy Peas with Grilled Sausage: Russian Recipes Revisited
For this Russian Recipes Revisited post you get just one photograph. Sorry about that...but I'll also tell you a story...so that should make up for that.
When I was a little girl growing up in Russia, there were certain foods I loved. I've already told you about some of them, but here's another: hot dogs with peas. The hot dogs were simply boiled and served sans buns on a plate. The peas were from a can and mixed with mayonnaise.
How many of you are gagging right now?
That's fine. You don't have to like the same food I like. But for me, this combination brings back so many warm childhood memories. In fact, when my twin sister and I were 9 years old and our brother was born, I remember having hot dogs and peas with mayonnaise for dinner that night because our bachelor uncle babysat us while our dad was at the hospital with our mom and brother.
Even now, two decades after moving to the US, I love having a "naked" hot dog either boiled or sauteed with a few sides. By the way, when I was little, my parents used to make an x cut on each end of a hot dog before sauteing it, making the ends curl up: try this with your kids!
A few weekends ago I decided to make a slightly grown up version of my childhood favorite. The recipe is below.
Cheesy Peas with Grilled Sausage
Serves 1
Ingredients
1 teaspoon olive oil
1 tablespoon finely chopped shallot
1 cup defrosted peas (if you have fresh ones, use them!)
2 tablespoons grated Romano cheese
1-2 prepared sausages (I used chicken with peppers and garlic variety)
Directions
1. In a small skillet heat the olive oil. Add the shallots and saute for 3-5 minutes till softened.
2. Add defrosted peas and heat through.
3. Turn the heat off and add Romano cheese to the peas, allowing the cheese to melt.
4. Meanwhile, diagonally slice your sausages and grill on both sides.
5. Serve grilled sausage slices on top of cheesy peas.
Do you have childhood favorite meals that sound weird to your friends?
Labels: chicken, Russian recipes revisited, side, vegetables
3/26/13
Russian Blini with Savory & Sweet Toppings: Russian Recipes Revisited
It's the last week of March, so it's time for another Russian Recipes Revisited post.
Whenever I go to visit my family in Seattle, my mom always makes blini for a late weekend breakfast. They are basically crepes that you can fill with either savory or sweet fillings. My mom is an expert at making blini and can probably make them with her eyes closed. They are incredible thin and perfectly round and take up an entire large dinner plate.
Of course my mom doesn't have an exact recipe for the batter. It's just some flour, eggs, milk, etc. Although I've eaten blini on countless occasions, I've never made them before. I wanted a recipe. An exact recipe.
Luckily, a while back I found this incredible book in my library for $0.10.
You can see the recipe for Thin Pancakes for Crepes and Blintzes in the photo below.
The batter was really easy to put together. I just used 1/3 of the sugar the recipe called for since these weren't going to be dessert blini.
Unlike my mom's, my blini weren't large. Nor were they perfectly round. Clearly, this takes practice! Also, I should have poured more batter into my pan. But other than the imperfect look, the blini tasted PERFECT! I especially loved the little crispy edges.
For the savory fillings I had sour cream, sauteed mushrooms, chili, avocado, cheese and chives.
For the sweet fillings I had sour cream, strawberries and fig butter.
Combination #1: chili, cheese, chives, sour cream and avocado:
Combination #2: sour cream, mushrooms, cheese, chives and avocado:
Combination #3: sour cream, strawberries & a bit of sugar:
This is a fun brunch or late breakfast idea. You can invite your friends to come over, make a bunch of blini and have a variety of toppings for everyone to use!
Labels: breakfast, brunch, dessert, Russian recipes revisited
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