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Top 10 Most Popular Ukrainian Foods
chefspencil ^

Posted on 02/26/2022 5:06:00 AM PST by mylife

Ukrainian foods belong to the Eastern European cuisine. Ukrainian borscht, varenyky, and salo might be familiar to many of you.

Indeed, traditional Ukrainian restaurants can’t help themselves cooking lots and lots of borscht and varenyky. Whenever they come up with a chef’s variation, they get drawn right back to the roots, because their clients say they want to taste authentic national food in its classic form. Of course, regional varieties of the same dish differ a lot. If you visit ten families in Ukraine, you will try ten kinds of borscht, you can be sure. And why? Because every region in Ukraine has its own popular meals, many influenced by Turkish, Polish or Crimean Tatars cuisine.

But also because Ukrainians love to be great hosts. So here come the top 10 dishes you will experience in any part of Ukraine, on weekdays and holidays .

(Excerpt) Read more at chefspencil.com ...


TOPICS: Chit/Chat; Food; Miscellaneous; Travel
KEYWORDS: borshch; borsht; cookery; food; ukrainian
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To: AZJeep

...a Polish Borsht, which is just a clear beet soup with nothing (or almost nothing) in it.
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Love this chilled with a lot of sour cream stirred in until it becomes bright magenta. Just perfect on a hot summer day.

The juice from canned beets is an acceptable quick substitute, IMO. Add 1 tsp of lemon juice if you want it sour and 1/2 tsp sugar to balance the earthy and sour w/a bit of sweet. Cut the beet slices into matchsticks and add.

Use full fat sour cream and serve in a tall glass with a spoon for the cream and sliced beets.

Strange that this is my birth family’s version, as my maternal grandmother was Ukrainian Jewish. We never had the meat version of borsht when I was growing up, always the clear chilled w/sliced beets and served with sour cream.

As for the sour soup made with sorrel....you can have all mine, although I make a Green Soup with sauteed onions, chicken broth and braised greens of any kind pureed into a soup, served cold with sour cream. Sorrel soup is too puckery for me.


41 posted on 02/27/2022 8:55:57 PM PST by reformedliberal (Make yourself less available.)
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To: reformedliberal

Sorrel is edible, but not healthy (in large qualities). It contains Vitamin C, so it was popular in the early transoceanic travel era as scurvy preventer.
But we have now lot of other Vitamin C foods, a lot of better than Sorrel.
Ukrainians used to starve a lot, so they eat a lot of not so great stuff. Just something to eat, to keep you alive.


42 posted on 02/28/2022 5:01:47 AM PST by AZJeep (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0AHQkryIIs)
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To: AZJeep

That’s my personal reaction to it. Normally, I like sour tastes & dark greens...just not sorrel.

This also explains the chicken fat & white radish sandwiches!!And the gut binder bomb aka: kishke (flour, schmaltz and seasoning in beef intestinal casings).


43 posted on 02/28/2022 1:36:15 PM PST by reformedliberal (Make yourself less available.)
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