Boris Pasternak’s menu
Sober vtoroyé / travel provisions, eaten at any hour

Buckwheat kasha with butter (grechnevaya kasha)

TravelDocumented🍄 🧂facile35 min

Toasted buckwheat groats swollen in water, bound with a knob of butter — a dense, earthy and comforting dish, eaten hot in the evening and cold on the road the next day.

Sober vtoroyé / travel provisions, eaten at any hour

Toasted buckwheat groats swollen in water, bound with a knob of butter — a dense, earthy and comforting dish, eaten hot in the evening and cold on the road the next day.

In Chistopol, in those years when everything was scarce, buckwheat kasha kept us on our feet. First you toast the grains in a dry pan until they smell of hazelnut — that's the whole secret. Then water, the lid, and you let it swell in peace while you work. A knob of melted butter on top, and even the barest days had their share of warmth; cold, in a cloth, it made the journey the next day.
Boris Pasternak
Ingredients
  • Buckwheat groats (grechka)one bowl (base)
  • Watertwice the volume (cooking)
  • Buttera good knob (richness)
  • Saltto taste (seasoning)
How it was made : Buckwheat, cultivated in Russia since the Middle Ages, was traditionally prepared in the Russian oven: the covered pot was placed in the declining heat for slow cooking that made the grains friable (*rassypchataya kasha*). A staple of soldiers and peasants, it traveled dry and was cooked anywhere.
Sources : V. Pokhlebkin, *Национальные кухни наших народов* · V. Pokhlebkin, *История важнейших пищевых продуктов* (History of Major Food Products)