Perogy’s are Little Pillows of Joy!
A large solid wood table sat in the kitchen with my grandmother’s hand crafted homestead chair and well hued benches which could easily sit a dozen people.
This vast table was used as the main preparation table that all my aunts and us kids sat at while hand prepping the many perogy’s, cabbage rolls, and other cultural delicacies from early homestead recipes. The different yearly holidays meant lots of company to feed.
My Ukrainian mother and Romanian father had 21 siblings between them and about half of my aunts and uncles families would descend on our home to share good memories and pleasantries. I remember the huge amounts of ethnic tidbits my mom and dad would prepare. On the days leading up to the event my dad would cure and smoke a large Ham Shank, Beef Brisket, Kabosa Sausage, Winnipeg Smoked Gold Eye and White Fish. There were a lot of family recipe pickled beets, herring and dill pickles would round off the feast. It was my mom who would get all the monotonous jobs like making cabbage rolls, crepes, latkes and of course hundreds of perogy’s. Perogy’s are still my favorite holiday comfort food and can be packed with several types of fillings. When making these stuffed pillows of joy, one hundred is a good amount to make.
Most all my traditional recipes use pounds, ounces, cups, tablespoon or teaspoons as measurement of volume and weight. This is the way I remember how to make the recipe and that it works out the best.
You need a large work surface to fill and lay your perogy’s out.
I lay out a large sheet of parchment paper dusted with flour to place the perogy’s on while being made.
I keep them covered with a large white cotton towel to keep from drying out.
Set yourself up with all the prepped items and pull up some chairs and have the family members take on the chore of either stuffing and sealing the perogy’s or rolling out and cutting the circles of dough.
Make it a social task; involve the kids, the more hands the faster you get to eat them.
The dough is essential for making a good perogy’s and here is my tried and true recipe.
Ukrainian Perogy’s Dough:
Potato and Cheddar Cheese Filling:
First sauté’ the finely chopped onion in the oil until tender and slightly browned. [add a tbs of water to aid in the browning.]
Boil, drain potatoes into a bowl.
Combine with shredded cheese, fried onion, butter, salt and pepper and mash.
Cool completely before use or it will temper the dough and make it hard to stuff.
Substitute the Cheddar Cheese with Dried Cottage Cheese Curds for an original Saskatchewan flavour.
For a Romanian version used pressed dry Sauerkraut and crisp Bacon for the filling.
Fruit fillings like Plum or Sour Cherry mixed with Cottage Cheese make for an interesting twist on flavours.