Anna Politkovskaya’s menu
Napitok — the meal's beverage (also serves as a sweet ending)

Dried Fruit Kompot

DrinkDocumented🍯 🍋facile30 min (+ steeping)

A sweet and slightly tangy infusion of dried fruits — apples, pears, apricots, prunes — simmered in water. A golden drink-compote, drunk with the fruits eaten. The quintessential Russian domestic "juice," free of sodas and artificial ingredients.

Napitok — the meal's beverage (also serves as a sweet ending)

A sweet and slightly tangy infusion of dried fruits — apples, pears, apricots, prunes — simmered in water. A golden drink-compote, drunk with the fruits eaten. The quintessential Russian domestic "juice," free of sodas and artificial ingredients.

At home, we don't serve soda to children: we make kompot. A handful of dried fruits thrown into boiling water, a little sugar, and you let it steep until the house smells of apricot and apple. You drink it warm in winter to warm your hands around the glass, chilled in summer. It's poor and generous at the same time — the best definition of the Russian table.
Anna Politkovskaya
Ingredients
  • Mixed dried fruits (apples, pears, prunes, apricots)two handfuls (base)
  • Watera large pot (infusion)
  • Sugarto taste (sweetness)
How it was made : Kompot (not to be confused with French compote) is a drink, not a spoon dessert. Served in all Soviet stolovayas (canteens) in glasses, it made use of dried fruits preserved all winter, the only source of fruity sweetness in a country with long winters.
Sources : Kniga o vkousnoï i zdorovoï pichtché · Darra Goldstein, A Taste of Russia