Many of the small Saskatchewan towns have a strong Ukrainian influence-the people, accents, churches, cooking, etc. If a conversation comes around to cooking, you can almost guarantee that perogies and sauerkraut will be discussed at some point. Recently I was served perogies when having dinner at a neighbour’s. I asked for the recipe and not long after she stopped by with the recipe and a bag of frozen perogies! Just last week I finally got around to making perogies which gave me two things: a sense of accomplishment and that I am on track to becoming a real Saskatchewanite. :) Now for the sauerkraut…well, let’s just stick to perogies for the time being. :)
Perogie Dough:
10 C flour
1 T salt
¼ t baking powder
1 C lard
3 C warm water
1 egg, beaten
In a large bowl combine the dry ingredients; cut in lard. Add in water and egg. Mix all together to form dough.
Roll out dough to about an 1/8” thickness. Cut out circles 3” in diameter. My drinking glass rims were too small so I used my ½ C measuring cup. Place about 1 T of filling (recipe below) on center of dough, fold over, and pinch edges.
Note #1: The original recipe called for 4 C of water but I started with 3 and only ended up needing a little more than that.
Note #2: If you want to make the dough ahead of time it will keep in the fridge for a couple days. Just wrap dough in saran wrap so it doesn’t dry out
Filling:
Potatoes
Cheese
Onion
Garlic
Boil about 7 or 8 med-large potatoes. Mash with butter, milk, salt and pepper. Add grated or small chunks of cheddar cheese while potato mixture is still warm so it will melt.
Caramelize or sauté onions and garlic. I used 3 large onions and 4 cloves of garlic and thought at the start I had taken the “tons of onions” recommendation from friends too seriously. The amount seemed a little excessive but after tasting one from the first cooked batch had I knew I had used the right amount. :)
For more flavour you can also add bacon bits, chives, dill, or parsley to the filling.
I place the perogies on a cookie rack set inside a cookie sheet and freeze them. This will keep them from sticking to each other when you bag them. Perogies freeze very well so, while this recipe makes a big batch of dough, it is great to make several dozen at once rather than having to make smaller batches more often.
Cooking Instructions:
Place frozen perogies in boiling water. Perogies will float when they are done (about 6-8 min.) You can add them to additionally sautéed onions with sour creams served on the side, if desired.
If you try this recipe I’d love to hear your results and opinions! :)
6 comments:
Thanks for the recipe Lindsey! I have really like the perogies I've tried at various places over here.
I didn't know there were so many different was to spell Perogie:); interesting.
I will try and make these soon, (if Abigail will let me:). Most times I still have to stick with making simple fast meals, (unless Graham is here to watch Abigail while I cook:).
What kind of perogies have you had? I made mine with the cheddar cheese but I guess cottage cheese is fairly common to use.
It does take a lot of time if you make them all at once. I made the dough and filling at the same time and then would prepare one pan of perogies to freeze and stick the dough and filling back in the fridge. The dough and filling will keep in the fridge for a couple days.
If you are able to give them a try, let me know how you like them. :)
Those look sooo good!! I will have to try that recipe for the dough sometime. Really enjoyed your pictorial journey. :) :)
To be honest, I'm not sure exactly what kinds I've had. I just know that they had potato and cheese with onion and they tasted very good:).
I was planning to make the dough this afternoon when Abigail was down for her nap and then just put it in the fridge like you said. But I found I was all out of lard. So, so much for that!
Thanks for the step by step instruction! I've heard of Perogies and how they are such a popular item up in Canadian provinces. But I've never made them! (secretly, I've thought about it a time or two)
I will let you know if I make them and what we think!
I'd never heard of them (which is not surprising!), but they certainly look interesting, and I'm keen to have a go at making them some time!
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