Tube Borscht, Cosmonaut Style
Beetroot borscht — deep red, tangy, aromatic — reduced to a smooth, concentrated purée, as eaten in space: sucked from a tube, not a crumb floating. On Earth, simply served as a velouté, with a spoonful of smetana.
Beetroot borscht — deep red, tangy, aromatic — reduced to a smooth, concentrated purée, as eaten in space: sucked from a tube, not a crumb floating. On Earth, simply served as a velouté, with a spoonful of smetana.
Up there, comrade, there's no plate or table: everything floats, even soup drops! So our engineers put good old borscht in a tube, like toothpaste — you squeeze, you swallow, and the red of the beetroot reminds you of the motherland amid the stars. When I floated in the void that March day in 1965, I knew that inside the ship awaited that familiar taste, tangy, comforting. Space is vast and cold, but a sip of borscht, and you're home again.
- •Beetroot — two (color and earthy sweetness)
- •Cabbage — a quarter head (body of the soup)
- •Carrot and onion — one each (aromatic base)
- •Beef broth — a pot (base)
- •Vinegar or tangy beet juice — a splash (signature sour note)
- •Dill and smetana — for serving (finishing)
Tube Borscht, Cosmonaut Style
Beetroot borscht — deep red, tangy, aromatic — reduced to a smooth, concentrated purée, as eaten in space: sucked from a tube, not a crumb floating. On Earth, simply served as a velouté, with a spoonful of smetana.
Why this dish? On March 18, 1965, Leonov stepped out into the vacuum of space from Voskhod 2. On board, Soviet cosmonauts ate in weightlessness using airtight toothpaste-like tubes: and borscht, the emblematic soup, was indeed sent into orbit as a concentrated purée. Here is the pivot dish of the Russian table transformed into space food.
Up there, comrade, there's no plate or table: everything floats, even soup drops! So our engineers put good old borscht in a tube, like toothpaste — you squeeze, you swallow, and the red of the beetroot reminds you of the motherland amid the stars. When I floated in the void that March day in 1965, I knew that inside the ship awaited that familiar taste, tangy, comforting. Space is vast and cold, but a sip of borscht, and you're home again.
Ingredients (period version)
- Beetroot — two (color and earthy sweetness)
- Cabbage — a quarter head (body of the soup)
- Carrot and onion — one each (aromatic base)
- Beef broth — a pot (base)
- Vinegar or tangy beet juice — a splash (signature sour note)
- Dill and smetana — for serving (finishing)
Ingredients
- Cooked beetroot — 300 g (colored base)
- Cabbage — 150 g (body)
- Carrot — 1 (sweetness)
- Onion — 1 (base)
- Beef or vegetable broth — 700 ml (liquid)
- Wine vinegar — 1 tbsp (acidity)
- Smetana — for serving (finishing)
- Dill — a few sprigs (finishing)
Method
- Sauté onion and carrot, add shredded cabbage and chopped beetroot.
- Pour in broth, simmer 25 min until tender.
- Add vinegar, adjust salt and pepper.
- For the 'space' version, blend until smooth and concentrated (can be served in a squeeze pouch for the tube effect).
- Serve hot, topped with smetana and dill — or sucked from a tube to reenact the orbital scene.
How it was made : The first Soviet space foods, from Gagarin in 1961, were purées in aluminum tubes. Borscht, meat, cheese, fruit purée: everything had to be crumb-free and drip-free, as any floating particle could interfere with breathing or instruments. The food program was overseen by doctors, every calorie calculated.
The contemporary twist : Serve the borscht in a translucent squeeze pouch placed on a black 'starry sky' slate: your guests dine as if aboard Voskhod 2.
Alexei Leonov · Charactorium