For the moment, let me offer three recipes from
Please to the Table, by Anya von Bremzen and John Welchman.
The first is likely a bit closer to what you're seeking, a recipe for
pelmeni (from Siberia, in this case). As a matter of style, they can be eaten either in a broth (usually beef or chicken) or simply fried in butter (less authentic, according to the authors, but I guess their family and mine came from different places). Traditional accompaniments: sour cream sprinkled with dill or white vinegar.
PELMENI (for 100
pelmeni--serving 6 to 8 people)
I'll skip the dough part of the recipe unless you specifically want it. This is the ultimate in basic filling:
3/4 pound ground beef (although they don't say so, leaner is NOT better: too dry will result in too dry a final product)
1/2 pound ground pork
2 finely chopped medium onions
salt and pepper
Always good to test boil one to check your filling flavor. The authors note that the raw filled
pelmeni are usually frozen at this point. When ready, boil in plenty of water for eight minutes or so. Toss with (or fry in) butter.
You place a scant teaspoon on the bottom half of a circle of dough, brush with egg white, fold over, and crimp with a fork.
PIROZHKI (makes 45-50)
3 T vegetable oil
3 finely chopped large onions
2 pounds boiled chuck, ground (or shredded if you prefer)
4 hard-boiled eggs, chopped
1/3 C beef broth
3 heaping T sour cream
1½ T flour
2 T chopped fresh dill
2 T chopped fresh parsley
salt and pepper
Saute the onions until well-browned (about 15 minutes). Combine everything and stir until well-blended. This recipe, according to the authors, can serve equally well in a variety of "settings" including, among others,
pirozhki and even
kulebiaka.
[Helpful (I hope) tangent:
pirozhok is the singular for
pirozhkipirog, on the other hand, is a large rectangle/square/round pie that can be either sweet or savory
pirogi is the plural (noticing a resemblance to Polish here? Actually, Polish
pierogi are dumplings, not at all the same as the Russian word)
kulebiaka is an oblong or rectangular pie, almost always filled with fish. A ton of work but an absolute stunner of a dish, both presentationally and taste-atorially speaking.]
BELIASHI (Tatar meat pies)
1 pound ground sirloin
1 large onion, grated
1/4 C finely chopped dill (or parsley)
1/3 C ice water
salt and lots of pepper
Combine everything well. Use as a filling for well-flattened biscuit (!) dough and then deep fry them. (Use about one T per pie. (The recipe should make about 20
beliashi)
I've got some variations and other ideas; I'll post later with more/different. Is this the right direction?
Gypsy Boy
"I am not a glutton--I am an explorer of food." (Erma Bombeck)