Gorbachev’s menu
Pocket zakuski / on-the-go snack

Pirozhki with cabbage and meat

TravelDocumented🧂 🍄moyen2 h 30 (incl. rising)

Soft leavened dough buns, golden from the oven, filled with a melting mixture of braised cabbage, minced meat, and onion. Eaten by hand, warm, they sustain a whole day's work.

Pocket zakuski / on-the-go snack

Soft leavened dough buns, golden from the oven, filled with a melting mixture of braised cabbage, minced meat, and onion. Eaten by hand, warm, they sustain a whole day's work.

When we left for the combine harvester, you see, we didn't come back home for lunch — the day was long and the grain wouldn't wait. So my mother would slip a dozen pirozhki, still warm, into a cloth for us, with cabbage and a bit of meat. We'd bite into them at the edge of the field, the steppe sun on our necks. Nothing complicated, comrade: dough, cabbage from our garden, and the knack of pinching the edges tightly so nothing escapes during baking.
Gorbachev
Ingredients
  • Wheat flourenough (leavened dough)
  • Sourdough or yeasta little (to raise the dough)
  • Milk and butteras needed (softness)
  • White cabbagehalf a head (filling)
  • Minced meata portion (rich filling)
  • Onion1 large (aromatic)
  • Egg1 (glaze)
How it was made : The *pirozhok* is the quintessential nomadic food of the Slavic world: baked or fried, filled with whatever was available — cabbage, potatoes, liver, sometimes jam for children. Wrapped in a cloth, it accompanied kolkhoz workers and train travelers.

See also