Pittsburgh Pierogies with Sour Cream

Discussion in 'Your Lovely Kitchen' started by Prima Donna, Jul 19, 2010.

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  1. Prima Donna

    Prima Donna New Member

    Pittsburgh Pierogies with Sour Cream

    Ingredients:

    •2 cups flour, plus extra for kneading and rolling dough
    •1/2 teaspoon salt
    •1 large egg
    •1/2 cup sour cream, plus extra to serve with the pierogi
    •1/4 cup butter, softened and cut into small pieces
    •butter and onions for sauteing
    •ingredients for filling of your choice (potato & cheese filling recipe below)

    Preparation:

    Pierogi Dough

    To prepare the pierogi dough, mix together the flour and salt. Beat the egg, then add all at once to the flour mixture. Add the 1/2 cup sour cream and the softened butter pieces and work until the dough loses most of its stickiness (about 5-7 minutes). You can use a food processor with a dough hook for this, but be careful not to overbeat. Wrap the dough in plastic and refrigerate for 20-30 minutes or overnight; the dough can be kept in the refrigerator for up to 2 days. Each batch of dough makes about 12-15 pierogies, depending on size.

    Prepare the Pierogies

    Roll the pierogi dough on a floured board or countertop until 1/8" thick. Cut circles of dough (2" for small pierogies and 3-3 1/2" for large pierogies) with a cookie cutter or drinking glass. Place a small ball of filling (about a tablespoon) on each dough round and fold the dough over, forming a semi-circle. Press the edges together with the tines of a fork.

    Boil the perogies a few at a time in a large pot of water. They are done when they float to the top (about 8-10 minutes). Rinse in cool water and let dry.

    Saute chopped onions in butter in a large pan until onions are soft. Then add pierogies and pan fry until lightly crispy. Serve with a side of sour cream for a true Pittsburgh pierogi meal.

    Homemade Pierogi Tips:

    1.If you are having a hard time getting the edges to stick together, you may have too much flour in the dough. Add a little water to help get a good seal.

    2.If you don't want to cook all of the pierogies right away, you can refrigerate them (uncooked) for several days or freeze them for up to several months.

    3.You can fill pierogies with pretty much anything you want, though potato and cheese is the most common (recipe below). Sweet pierogies are often filled with a prune mixture.

    Potato, Cheese & Onion Filling: Peel and boil 5 large potatoes until soft. Red potatoes are especially good for this. While the potatoes are boiling, finely chop 1 large onion and saute in butter until soft and translucent. Mash the potatoes with the sauted onions and 4-8oz of grated cheddar cheese (depending on how cheesy you want your pierogies), adding salt and pepper to taste. You can also add some fresh parsley, bacon bits, chives, or other enhancements if you desire. Let the potato mixture cool and then form into 1" balls.
     
  2. deercharmer1

    deercharmer1 Somewhere in the forest....

    OMG!!!! This sounds SOOO good!!!! NOM NOM NOM :D :D :D
     
  3. June-

    June- New Member

    You from Pittsburgh PD?
     
  4. joy

    joy New Member

    Oh geeeeez ... I thought that said PIGEON Pierogies ... :eek: ::) :p
     
  5. SMRoz

    SMRoz Coast Guard Dizzy! (Ret)

    Gonna try this over the weekend. I'll ban ya if I like it!
     
  6. Prima Donna

    Prima Donna New Member

    This is probably not at all good for any of us, but it is deeeelicious. I posted it for Donna Buschiabo. She mentioned Polish foods and this is Pittsburgh's version of Pierogies. Hope she/alla y'all like it.

    No, I'm not from Pittsburgh, June. I am Donna June from W.Va., daughter of a coal miner, now living in Wisconsin. :)
     
  7. phildsc

    phildsc New Member

    Gee, I love pierogies. Haven't had any since about 1947 when I had White Russian friends in China. They liked having a young marine for a dinner guest. Especially when I had a few bucks and could bring them soap and tobacco from the PX
     
  8. Prima Donna

    Prima Donna New Member

    Phil,

    Take that innocent smile of yours over to the 18-year-olds that you ogle every day. Ask them if their grandmothers could make you some pierogies! :D ;D :-*
     
  9. June-

    June- New Member

    I'm from WV too.
     
  10. Prima Donna

    Prima Donna New Member

    Yes, I know. That's why I mentioned it. Both of us from the same state and we have 'June' in common, too. :)
     
  11. June-

    June- New Member

    :D

    And I like pierogies too though I have never made them. Maybe I will try your recipe.
     
  12. phildsc

    phildsc New Member

    Isn't that West By G** Virginia?
     
  13. June-

    June- New Member

    You bet!
     
  14. buschiabo

    buschiabo New Member

    Thanks Donna. Sounds good but I'm too lazy anymore to make them from scratch. I can buy frozen pierogi at the military commissary near us and I do so every now and then and yes, we like the potato/cheese variety. By the way - I'm Donna too. Born in St. Paul, raised in Chicago and now a Texan by choice.
     
  15. June-

    June- New Member

    What, is everyone named either Donna or June ?

    There is a great little Polish Deli in the Strip District of Pittsburgh that sells terrific pierogies, cheese or sauerkraut. Why doesn't spell check know what a piergoie is? Don't buy the cow candy though. Yuck.
     
  16. Tara

    Tara New Member

    Wow! My name is Tara Donna June! Ok, no it's not, but I do like perogies! I just ate some. They came from a bag though.
     

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