Grechka with mushrooms (Russian toasted buckwheat)
Toasted buckwheat grains, swollen in water until tender and nutty, mixed with sautéed mushrooms and plenty of dill. Nourishing, simple, without excess — exactly the fuel for a day of training.
Toasted buckwheat grains, swollen in water until tender and nutty, mixed with sautéed mushrooms and plenty of dill. Nourishing, simple, without excess — exactly the fuel for a day of training.
You know, I grew up with this, grechka is the taste of Moscow, the taste of my mother's kitchen. When I left for Florida at fourteen, this is what I missed most — not candy, buckwheat! You toast it a little so it smells like hazelnut, pour in the water, and don't touch it, just let it do its thing. With mushrooms and lots of dill, it's perfect before a workout: it sticks to your body without weighing you down. Believe me, after two hours on the court, nothing better.
- •Toasted buckwheat (grechka) — a large glass (protein-rich base grain)
- •Wild or button mushrooms — a good handful (umami, garnish)
- •Onion — one small (aromatic base)
- •Butter — a knob (fat, binder)
- •Fresh dill — a bunch (signature flavor)
- •Salt — to taste (seasoning)
Grechka with mushrooms (Russian toasted buckwheat)
Toasted buckwheat grains, swollen in water until tender and nutty, mixed with sautéed mushrooms and plenty of dill. Nourishing, simple, without excess — exactly the fuel for a day of training.
Why this dish? Buckwheat is the kasha every Moscow child eats from the cradle. For Anna, who left at 14 for the Bollettieri Academy in Florida, this dish is the taste of home left in Moscow: a slow-carb and protein-rich dish that sports nutritionists approve of as much as her grandma.
You know, I grew up with this, grechka is the taste of Moscow, the taste of my mother's kitchen. When I left for Florida at fourteen, this is what I missed most — not candy, buckwheat! You toast it a little so it smells like hazelnut, pour in the water, and don't touch it, just let it do its thing. With mushrooms and lots of dill, it's perfect before a workout: it sticks to your body without weighing you down. Believe me, after two hours on the court, nothing better.
Ingredients (period version)
- Toasted buckwheat (grechka) — a large glass (protein-rich base grain)
- Wild or button mushrooms — a good handful (umami, garnish)
- Onion — one small (aromatic base)
- Butter — a knob (fat, binder)
- Fresh dill — a bunch (signature flavor)
- Salt — to taste (seasoning)
Ingredients
- Toasted buckwheat (kasha) — 200 g (protein-rich base grain)
- Button mushrooms — 250 g (umami, garnish)
- Onion — 1 medium (aromatic base)
- Olive oil or butter — 1 tbsp (cooking)
- Water — 400 ml (buckwheat cooking)
- Fresh dill — 1/2 bunch (signature flavor)
- Salt, pepper — to taste (seasoning)
Method
- Rinse the buckwheat. Pour it dry into a hot saucepan and stir for 2 minutes until it smells nutty.
- Add salted water (two parts water to one part buckwheat), bring to a simmer, cover, and let absorb for 12-15 minutes on low heat without stirring. Turn off heat, let rest covered for 5 minutes.
- Meanwhile, sauté the chopped onion, then the sliced mushrooms until golden.
- Mix the buckwheat and mushrooms, adjust salt, add pepper.
- Off the heat, add a large handful of chopped dill. Serve hot.
How it was made : In the izba as in the Soviet apartment, buckwheat was cooked in the Russian oven (pechka), where it would finish swelling for hours in the declining heat. It was toasted beforehand to develop flavor; mushrooms picked and dried in summer perfumed dishes all winter.
The contemporary twist : Serve as a training bowl: warm buckwheat, roasted mushrooms, a soft-boiled egg, and a spoonful of light smetana — grandma's kasha, gym edition.
Anna Kournikova · Charactorium