For the filling:
2 Lbs Ground Pork
2 Lbs Ground Beef
2 Onions
2 Tsp Salt
2 Tsp Pepper
Finely-chop the onions in a food
processor and then add to a mixing bowl with the pork, beef. Add salt and pepper to taste and mix
well. Refrigerate while you prepare the first
batch of dough.
For a single batch of dough:
(Enough for about half the meat filling recipe
above. On 2/28/16, two batches of dough was just barely enough for 5 Lbs of meat.)
1 Egg
2 Cups Milk
~6 Cups Flour
Blend milk and eggs with a mixer, and
then slowly add the flour until the dough pulls away from the sides of the
mixer. It’ll need to be fairly dry, as
you’ll have to roll it out into thin layers.
But it shouldn't be so dry that the two layers of dough that will be
pressed together later won’t stick together (and seal the meat inside).
* An all-metal mold is best, as it doesn't break easily. Here's one I found on Amazon, but they're not cheap here in America. But if you find yourself in Eastern Europe sometime soon, I'm sure you can find one for much cheaper.
Pinch off small pieces of the meat
mixture, about the size of a grape. Roll
each into a small ball, and press into the mold, flattening each as needed so
the meat is roughly level with the dough.
Most of the meat should be sunken into the mold.
* Updated on 2/28/16 We've found that wetting one side of dough (after being rolled-out) with water...enough so it's slimy...allows the top layer of dough to stick to the bottom much more effectively. So much so that when you roll-out the pelmini on the mold, they tend to seal themselves much better.
Freeze the pelmeni, and use what you
need for meals throughout the week, month, or year. Boil in enough water to cover the pelmeni,
and serve with broth (the water they were just boiled in) along with sour cream
and salt & pepper. You can also boil them and drain the water. Russians
basically eat these as a soup, but you’re welcome to strain them and eat them
like tortellini.
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