CAT | Hungarian
Paluski (Polish Potato Fingers)
Do these bring back memories.
Paluski! We always had them with
homemade kapusta and kielbasi.
I make these all of the time.
My
family loves them with a nice mushroom gravy.
They taste delicious
fried in some bacon fat with onions and crisp bacon.
I sometimes
cut them up into small pieces and add them to my homemade chicken
soup.
I have even gone so far as to fry them up and serve them with
sunnyside eggs, scrambled and poached.
Yummy, yummy!
4 cups flour, plus extra if needed
to make a pliable dough
4 cups mashed potatoes, cold
1 tablespoon salt
4 eggs
Cook potatoes and drain well.
Press through a ricer and place in
a large bowl.
Cool
Combine flour and salt in a large bowl.
Mixing well.
Make a well
in the center of flour and add eggs, one at a time, mixing well
until all the eggs are mixed well.
Add the riced potatoes and mix until all ingredients are blended
real well.
If necessary add some water to make the dough pliable if
too stiff, this will depend on how much flour you add.
(I have
found that 4 cups will make a very wet dough, so I add 1/4 cups of
flour at a time until the dough feels just right.
This is done by
feel.****do not make the dough too stiff****.
Roll out dough in portions at a time onto floured surface,
rolling out into a long log about 1-inch thick.
Cut logs into 3/4-inch pieces, rolling slightly to even out.
Drop into rolling salted boiling water and cook until paluski
float to the top, allowing them to simmer a few minutes.
Remove
with a slotted spoon and place in a large bowl.
Have some melted butter ready to drizzle over the paluski to
coat them.
You can sauté some onions in butter and toss in
with them.
Either way you doctor them up, they taste wonderful.
Piroghi with Potato and Cheese Filling
Posted by LladyRusty
Source: Chef Tina Burpee – Ethnic Food Coordinator for St.
Mark’s Orthodox Church in Bethesda, Maryland
It took me a long long time to finally find a recipe that makes
piroghi like those I remember from my childhood.
I make all 200 and
freeze what I’m not going to use.
These freeze very well.
Dough
10 pounds all-purpose flour
1 dozen whole eggs
2 pints sour cream
3 tablespoons salt
5 to 6 cups water
Mix all ingredients and knead on lightly floured surface until
smooth.
(Dough can be frozen at this point for later use.
Knead in
additional flour when thawed before using.)
Roll out dough about 1/8-inch thick.
Cut into 3-inch circles.
(Plastic champagne glasses work as well as cutters.)
Fill each circle of dough with a ball or heaping teaspoon of
potato filling.
Fold dough in half and pinch edges well to seal completely.
Cook in boiling water just until piroghi rise to the
surface.
Drain piroghi and sauté in melted butter and
chopped onions until golden.
Serve with sour cream.
(Piroghi can be frozen after boiling if desired.
To keep piroghi
from sticking together, remove them from boiling water and put them
into an ice bath to cool completely.
Drain the piroghi from the ice
bath, and dip into vegetable oil and drain.
Put the oiled piroghi
into zip log bags for easy freezing.
To cook, defrost and
sauté with butter and onions.)
Potato and Cheese Filling
10 pounds potatoes, peeled and cut into small pieces
2 large onions
2 pounds Cheddar cheese, shredded
Salt
Boil potatoes until soft.
Drain.
Add cheese to potatoes and cover for a few minutes to let the
cheese melt.
Chop onion very finely and add to potato and cheese.
Add salt to taste.
Using potato masher or electric mixer, whip potatoes until
smooth.
Cool potato filling completely before using.
Roll into small balls or scoop with spoon.
Makes about 200 piroghi.
Pirogyi
Posted by jerseyjan
Here are a couple variations of the dough:
#1 Dough
1 egg
2 tablespoons sour cream
1 cup milk
1 cup water
2 plus cups flour
#2 Dough
1 egg
1 cup water
2 tablespoons Crisco
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 1/2 cups flour
#3 Dough
1 cup flour
2 egg yolks
1/4 teaspoon salt
5 tablespoons water
Which ever you use, mix all ingredients to make a soft dough.
Knead well.
Roll out until thin.
Use a round donut cutter or glass
to cut out rounds.
Fill with potato, cabbage or cheese.
To hold
dough together once filled, use water around edges while crimping.
Drop in salted water , once they come to the top, cook about 5
minutes more.
Potato Filling
5 pound baking potatoes, peeled and boiled
Mash by hand.
Add cream cheese, melted butter, salt/pepper and
Cheddar to flavor.
Cabbage Filling
1 head cabbage, chopped fine
Add salt and let stand for 1 hour.
Squeeze out water from
cabbage and fry in butter until browned.
Add some sugar ( 1-2
teaspoons).
Don’t burn.
Cheese Filling
1/2 cup dry cottage cheese
1 egg yolk
1 teaspoon butter
Pinch of salt
Combine and mix.
Chocolate Marzipan Slices (Mandulás
Szalámi — Hungary)
2 (3 1/2 ounce) tubes almond paste
2 (1 ounce) squares semisweet chocolate, melted and cooled
1/4 cup chopped almonds
Confectioners’ sugar
Mix almond paste, chocolate and almonds thoroughly.
Knead on
surface sprinkled with 1 to 2 tablespoons confectioners’ sugar
until of uniform color and consistency.
Shape into 6-inch long
roll; roll in confectioners’ sugar.
Wrap in plastic wrap;
refrigerate at least 12 hours
Cut roll into 1/4-inch slices.
Makes about 2 dozen candies.
Prune Filling
1 pound pitted dry prunes, cooked
1 cup liquid from cooked prunes
1/2 cup granulated sugar
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
Cover prunes with cold water; stir in sugar, and bring to a
boil.
Reduce heat and cook slowly, stirring constantly until smooth
and thick.
Remove from heat and add lemon juice, grated rind and
cinnamon.
Apricots may be used in place of prunes.
Makes enough filling for 3 dozen kolaches.