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  2. List of Russian dishes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Russian_dishes

    The identifying ingredients are honey and smetana (sour cream) or condensed milk. Russian-style Napoleon cake A dessert made of puff pastry layered with pastry cream. Paskha: Tvorog (farmer's cheese) plus heavy cream, butter, sugar, vanilla, etc., usually molded in the form of a truncated pyramid. Traditional for Easter. Pryanik

  3. Seblak - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seblak

    Main ingredients: Wet krupuk cooked with scrambled egg, vegetables, and other protein sources (chicken, chicken feet, seafood, or beef sausages), with spicy sauces including garlic, shallot, kencur, sweet soy sauce, and chili sauce. Variations: Seblak kering (dry seblak) or kurupuk seblak which is actually a spicy kurupuk (traditional cracker)

  4. Pirozhki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirozhki

    Pirozhki are either fried or baked. They come in sweet or savory varieties. Common savory fillings include ground meat, mashed potato, mushrooms, boiled egg with scallions, or cabbage. Typical sweet fillings are fruit (apple, cherry, apricot, lemon), jam, or tvorog. [9] Baked pirozhki may be glazed with egg to produce golden color.

  5. Vorschmack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorschmack

    The recipes are similar to the Russian ones described above. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] [ 11 ] Another variety, a meat stew named forszmak lubelski is known in East Poland ( Lublin region), usually made of chopped meat (beef, pork, or chicken), pickled cucumbers, and tomato paste.

  6. Russian cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_cuisine

    Pelmeni—boiled dumplings with meat filling Caviar—a delicacy that is very popular in Russian culture. The history of Russian cuisine was divided in four groups: Old Russian cuisine (9th to 16th century), Old Moscow cuisine (17th century), the cuisine that existed during the ruling of Peter and Catherine the Great (18th century), and finally Petersburg cuisine, which took place from the end ...

  7. Pirog - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirog

    Pirozhki (Russian diminutive, literally "small pirogi") or pyrizhky (Ukrainian), individual-sized buns that can be eaten with one hand; [1] Rasstegai ("unbuttoned pirog"), a type of Russian pirog with a hole in the top; [10]

  8. Pelmeni - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pelmeni

    The traditional Udmurt recipe requires a mixture of 45% beef, 35% mutton, and 20% pork. [7] Various spices, such as black pepper and diced onions as well as garlic, are mixed into the filling. They are commonly topped with sour cream , mayonnaise , dill , red onions or vinegar , all of which are traditional to the region and can be produced in ...

  9. Speķrauši - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speķrauši

    The day before baking bacon patties, the cook usually spends one or two hours preparing any meat and onion that will be used.Bacon and other fatty meats (such as bacon or back bacon) do not chop well in a food processor and tend to get caught on the blade, so the cook must hand chop these into tiny cubes, about 1.5 millimetres (about 1/16 inches).