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Recipe(tried): Pierogi and 16 Variations

Side Dishes - Assorted
I have had them with kraut never heard of rice in Pierogies.
I hope these recipes help.
Good Luck
BarryT

Pierogi Dough
4 cups all-purpose flour
2 eggs
1/2 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon salt
2/3 cup warm water

Potato Filling
3 medium potatoes, cooked, drained and mashed
1/2 medium onion
1/4 cup butter
salt and pepper -- to taste

Cheese Filling
1 pound dry cottage cheese
2 eggs -- beaten
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup butter

Sauce
1 large onion -- chopped
1/2 cup butter

Dough: Mix flour, eggs, sour cream, salt, and water, a little at a
time. Knead dough until firm and elastic; Cover and let rest 10
minutes.

Potato Filling: Prepare potatoes, set aside.

Cheese Flling: Combine ingredients and mix.

Sauce: Saute onion in butter until golden.

Assembly: Divide dough into three parts. On a floured surface roll dough to about 1/8-inch thick; cut into 3-inch rounds. Place a small spoonful of the filling in the center of each round, fold and press the edges together firmly to seal.

Use a deep pot and fill 2/3 full of water
Drop the pierogi in Rapidly boiling water with 1 teaspoon of oil.
Do not crowd. Simmer for 15 minutes or until pierogies begin to float to the top stirring gently to prevent sticking. Remove with a slotted spoon and drain well.

Savory
Cheese Pierogi Filling
Fill dough rounds prepared according to the above dough recipe with a mixture made by combining 1 lb. ground farmer cheese (or dry cottage cheese) with 1 whole egg, 1 extra egg yolk, and salt and pepper to taste. 1 tsp. sugar may be added (optional). If neither farmer cheese nor dry cottage cheese are available, drain and press out all moisture from ordinary creamed cottage cheese, which can be pulverized in a blender or ground. If filling is too wet, stir in some bread crumbs. Variations: Add 1-2 Tbsp. finely chopped chives to mixture and feel free to vary the taste with different spices like a pinch or two homemade herb pepper, hunter's seasoning, powdered
caraway, crushed, dried mint leaves, etc.

Potato Pierogi Filling
Cook 1 1/2 lbs. peeled potatoes or potatoes in jackets (skins), and peel under cold running water. Mash well or put through ricer and set aside to cool. Meanwhile, lightly brown 2 finely chopped onions in 2-3 Tbsp. butter. Combine the potatoes with the onions, 1 egg, 2 Tbsp. bread crumbs, and (optional) 2 Tbsp. chopped chives. Note: The egg and bread crumbs may be omitted. For non-fast days, the onions may be fried up with a heaping Tbsp. of diced bacon or salt pork.

Sauerkraut and Mushroom Pierogi Filling
Soak 1 oz. dried Polish mushrooms 2-3 hrs. in 1 1/2 cups water, then cook in same water until tender. Chop mushroom fine, return to water, and cook to reduce liquid. When you have no more than about 2 Tbsp. of almost syrupy mushroom liquid left, switch off heat and set aside. Rinse well in cold water 2 well-packed c. sauerkraut, drain in colander, press out excess moisture, chop fairly fine, place in pot, scald with boiling water to cover, and cook on med. heat 20 minutes. Meanwhile, simmer 1 finely chopped onion in 2 Tbsp. butter until transparent or slightly browned. To sauerkraut add the mushrooms and their liquid, the browned onions, and (optional) 1/2 tsp. sugar. Simmer on low heat under cover another 30 minutes or until tender, stirring frequently to prevent burning. When tender, uncover and allow moisture to steam away. Salt and pepper to taste then transfer to sieve, pressing out all moisture. If you like the sauerkraut very fine, you may run it through your meat grinder. 1-2 Tbsp. bread crumbs may be added to mixture.

Cabbage Pierogi Filling
Shred 1 lb. (small head) of cabbage, scald with boiling water to cover, bring to boil, and cook 3 minutes. Drain. Cover with boiling water again and cook on med. heat 20 minutes. Separately, in skillet simmer 1 chopped onion in 3 Tbsp. butter until tender, add cabbage to onions in skillet, stir to mix ingredients, salt and pepper to taste, and simmer under cover till tender. Uncover and simmer a while longer, stirring constantly until moisture evaporates. Transfer to sieve and press out excess moisture. Chop fine or grind. Besides salt and pepper, other seasoning possibilities include about 1 tsp. or so chopped dill, or 1/4 tsp. crushed caraway seeds.

Fresh Mushroom Pierogi Filling
Wash, slice or chop and simmer 16 oz. fresh, wild, or store-bought mushrooms in 4 Tbsp. butter, together with 2 finely chopped onions under cover about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally. Uncover and continue simmering until moisture evaporates and mushrooms begin to sizzle. Run mushrooms and onions through meat grind together with 1 stale, unsoaked kaiser roll. Add 1 egg to mixture, mix well, salt and pepper, add a little chopped parsley (optional), and firm up with a little bread crumbs if necessary. Variation: We feel adding 1 or even 1/2 oz. dried Polish mushrooms (pre-soaked, cooked and chopped as usual) greatly improves the flavor of this dish. Another possibility is to use 8 oz. of the white, store-bought mushroom and 8 oz. oyster mushrooms.

Meat Pierozki Filling
Grind 1 lb. or so boiled or roast beef or equivalent amount of assorted, cooked leftover meat. Simmer 2 finely chopped onions in 2 Tbsp. butter until slightly browned. Soak a stale kaiser roll in 1/2 cup milk until soggy and grind together with the onions. Combine ingredients well, salt and pepper to taste, and sprinkle with MSG. Other seasoning possibilities include a sprinkle of garlic powder, paprika, and/or marjoram, a dash of beef seasoning or hunter's seasoning. Note: Polish dumplings or dough-pockets filled with meat are usually called piero=zki (little pierogi) because they are somewhat smaller in size. Use a juice glass or smaller biscuit-cutter to cut out the rounds of dough.

Fish Pierogi Filling
Simmer 2 finely chopped onions in 2-3 Tbsp. butter until slightly browned. Run the onions and 3/4-1 lb. fried or otherwise cooked fish fillets through grinder. Into mixture work 1 beaten egg and 2 Tbsp. or so bread crumbs--enough to get a filling that is not too moist. Sprinkle in 1-2 Tbsp. chopped dill and salt and pepper to taste. Variation: Boneless smoked fish may be used instead.

Pea or Bean Pierogi Filling
Soak 1 cup navy beans, lima beans, or dried yellow peas in 5 cups water overnight, then cook in same water until tender but not disintegrated. Drain in colander and allow to cool. Brown a heaping Tbsp. diced bacon, remove nuggets, and lightly brown 2 chopped onions in drippings. Grind the beans or peas and combine with browned onions and bacon nuggets. Season with salt, pepper, savory, and/or marjoram. Note: The beans or peas may also be prepared with mushrooms.

Blueberry Pierogi Filling
Wash, drain, and drip dry 1 pint blueberries. Some cooks sprinkle the blueberries with sugar before filling pierogi, but that makes the filling quite runny. We feel it is better to fill them with just the blueberries and then sprinkle the cooked pierogi with powered or granulated sugar on serving platter. This is a great summertime favorite, the more so that the small wild blueberries found in Poland's forests are far tastier than the commercially grown variety available in America. Note: Your blueberry pierogi will be less runny if you sprinkle the berries with 1-2 Tbsp. flour or potato starch.

Cherry Pierogi Filling
Remove stems, wash and pit 1 lb. or so sweet or sour cherries. Place in colander and gently press out some of the juice, taking care not to damage fruit. Fill pierogi with 3-6 cherries each, depending on the size of your dough rounds. Sprinkling cherries with flour or potato starch will help take up some of the juice and make your pierogi less runny. Variation: If fresh fruit is not available, canned cherry-pie filling or cherry preserves containing whole cherries may be used instead. Place 2 c. pie filling or preserves (or 1 cup of each) in a pot and heat to just below boiling. Drain and sieve, and when dripping stops, use the fruit to fill pierogi.

Prune Pierogi Filling
Soak 2 cups or so prunes overnight in water to cover. Add 1-2 sugar and 1 Tbsp. lemon juice. Cook on low heat until tender. Remove pits, place prunes in sieve, and press out excess moisture, then fill pierogi.

Apple Pierogi Filling
Peel and coarsely grate 5 cooking apples. Sprinkle with a heaping Tbsp. powdered sugar and a dash or two of cinnamon.

Date Pierogi Filling
Grind 12 oz. pitted dates and 4 oz. blanched almonds. Cream 2 1/2 Tbsp. butter with 2 hard-cooked egg yolks (sieved) and 1 raw egg yolk. Combine with date-almond mixture and flavor with 1 Tbsp. rum or 1/2 tsp. rum extract.

Poppy Seed Pierogi Filling
Scald 1 cup poppy seeds with boiling water and cook covered on very low heat until poppy seeds fall apart when rubbed between fingers. Drain well and run through grinder 2-3 times. Mix with 1/2 cup powdered sugar, 1/2 cup soaked, drained raisins, 1/2 cup ground or finely chopped walnuts, 1 beaten egg, and 1/2 tsp. grated orange rind. Note: Canned poppy seed filling, "doctored" with the above ingredients, may be used when there isn't time to make if from scratch.

Fried Pierogi
Spread 2 c. flour along the bottom of a large, dry skillet, sprinkle with 1 t. salt and heat, stirring frequently, until flour is lightly browned. Remove from heat. Slowly stir in just enough boiling water to bind the flour into a dough, return to heat, and mix well until dough comes away from skillet. Set aside to cool. Roll dough by hand on board into a long, narrow, even roll. Slice roll into 1/2-inch rounds one at a time, flatten between palms into a small pancake, fill with a spoonful of savory cheese filling of choice, fold over, and pinch edges together. Fry in 1 c. hot lard, vegetable shortening, or oil to a nice golden brown on both sides, drain on absorbent paper and serve immediately, topped with liquified sour cream.

Lazy (Unfilled) Cheese Pierogi
Grind 1 lb. (or slightly more) farmer cheese. Add 3 lightly beaten raw egg yolks and 2 Tbsp. soft butter. (Butter may be omitted if you're cutting down on fat.) Mix ingredients into a uniform mass and fold in 3 stiffly beaten egg whites. Stirring constantly, work in 1 cup flour, add 1/2 to 1 tsp. salt, and mix lightly. Turn dough out onto lightly floured board and roll by hand into a long 1-inch roll. Even up sides and flatten top with a wide-blade knife and cut at an angle into 1-1 1/2 inch pieces. Drop the dumplings in batches into boiling salted water so as not to crowd them in pot. After they float up, cook them at a slow boil about 3 minutes. Remove with slotted spoon and serve immediately with melted butter or Polonaise topping.
MsgID: 038054
Shared by: BarryT Ebensburg, PA
In reply to: ISO: perogies with rice and saurkraut filling
Board: International Recipes at Recipelink.com
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