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I’m not gonna lie to you.
These vareniki are a lot of trouble, but they are soo soo good. We grew up on these. Who didn’t? The dough is very easy to make. Make a ton of them because they freeze very well.
You can modify the filling a hundred different ways. Butter them up and serve them with a generous heap of sour cream. Don’t forget to coat them with “zazharka;” fried up bacon and onions. Uhh, I am drooling now!
If you want to make your man happy, make him some Vareniki (вареники). P.S. If you are new to making these, check out this new recipe with more exact measurements.
Ingredients for Dough:
1 large egg
2 Tbsp sour cream
3/4 cup water + 1 1/4 cup 2% milk (or 1 cup water + 1 cup whole milk)
5 cups all-purpose flour, plus about 1 cup more for dusting
For the Filling:
(I will post these individually)
Potato & onion
Blueberry
Cherry
Ground pork and turkey
Toppings:
For Potatoe filled vareniki:
Zazharka: Saute bacon and onion in butter and drizzle over your finished vareniki/pierogies.
For Meat filled pelmeni:
Melted butter. Also good dipped in vinegar or ketchup.
For fruit filling:
Dust finished product with some sugar to keep from sticking and dip in sour cream.
How to Make Basic Pierogi dough:


1. Whisk together egg and sour cream until well combined.
2. Whisk in 1 1/4 cup milk and 3/4 cup water.
3. Using a spatula, mix in four, 1 cup at a time.

4. Place the dough onto a floured surface. Using a food scraper, knead the dough by turning and folding it with the food scraper. Dust the dough with flour as you need it until it is soft and doesn’t stick to your hands (you’ll need around 1 cup more flour). Knead for 6 to 8 minutes. Don’t add too much flour or the dough will become hard to work with.
5. Place the dough under a bowl and let it sit at room temperature for about 1 hour. Someone mentioned they made this recipe without letting it sit for an hour and it turned out great.
6. Cut the dough into 4 to 6 pieces. Work with one piece at a time and keep the rest covered with plastic wrap.
7. Form your chunk of dough into a log and cut off small pieces, one at a time. Pieces should be a little larger than a gum ball. Dust your rolling pin and cutting board with flour and roll out a piece of dough until it is 1/8″ thick and 3″ diameter. .
8. Fill these circles with the desired filling (potatoes, cherries, blueberries or meat). Fold the dough over the filling to form a crescent and seal the edges tightly with your fingers. If making pelmeni (meat filling), pinch the two edges together to form a “diaper” shape. Place the finished pierogis on a cutting board dusted with flour until ready to boil.

9. Bring a large pot of salted water to boil. As you finish the first batch of pierogies, place them in boiling water. After they float to the top, cook about 2 to 3 minutes more, then remove them with a slotted spoon to a bowl. Drizzle the pierogies with melted butter.
10. Repeat steps 7 through 9 with the rest of the dough.
Notes:
To freeze the pierogies, place them on a cutting board and stick them in the freezer uncovered. Once they are frozen, transfer them to a large freezer-safe ziplock bag and dust generously with flour. They stay perfect for months.
Basic Russian Vareniki or Pelmeni Dough (Russian Pierogi)

Ingredients
Ingredients for Dough:
- 1 large egg
- 2 Tbsp sour cream
- 3/4 cup water
- 1 1/4 cup 2% or whole milk
- 5 cups all-purpose flour, plus about 1 cup more for dusting
For the Filling: (I will post these individually)
- Potato & onion
- Blueberry
- Cherry
- Ground pork and turkey
Toppings:
For Potatoe filled vareniki:
- Zazharka: Saute bacon and onion in butter and drizzle over your finished vareniki/pierogies.
For Meat filled pelmeni:
- Melted butter. Also good dipped in vinegar or ketchup.
For fruit filling:
- Dust finished product with some sugar to keep from sticking and dip in sour cream.
Instructions
- Whisk together egg and sour cream until well combined.
- Whisk in 1 1/4 cup milk and 3/4 cup water.
- Using a spatula, mix in four, 1 cup at a time.
- Place the dough onto a floured surface. Using a food scarper, knead the dough by turning and folding it with the food scraper. Dust the dough with flour as you need it until it is soft and doesn't stick to your hands (you'll need around 1 cup more flour). Knead for 6 to 8 minutes. Don't add too much flour or the dough will become hard to work with.
- Place the dough under a bowl and let it sit at room temperature for about 1 hour.
- Cut the dough into 4 to 6 pieces. Work with one piece at a time and keep the rest covered with plastic wrap.
- Form your chunk of dough into a log and cut off small pieces, one at a time. Pieces should be a little larger than a gumball. Dust your rolling pin and cutting board with flour and roll out a piece of dough until it is 1/8" thick and 3" diameter.
- Fill these circles with the desired filling (potatoes, cherries, blueberries or meat). Fold the dough over the filling to form a crescent and seal the edges tightly with your fingers. If making pelmeni (meat filling), pinch the two edges together to form a "diaper" shape. Place the finished pierogis on a cutting board dusted with flour until ready to boil.
- Bring a large pot of salted water to boil. As you finish the first batch of pierogies, place them in boiling water. After they float to the top, cook about 2 to 3 minutes more, then remove them with a slotted spoon to a bowl. Drizzle the pierogies with melted butter.
- Repeat steps 7 through 9 with the rest of the dough.





The amount of flour used is just a general guideline…It depends on your altitude of where you live and how far above or below sea level you are…I found that out from my mama in law…I tried her recipie, it was easy, but it didn’t work, I had to add about two more cups of flour…she lives in a different country…
Hi
these look great! i am ready to make them finally..
do u think using a hand mixer will be fine? I will definitely need to invest in a stand mixer soon..
You really don’t need a mixer for this recipe at all. The only thing I’m not crazy about with this recipe is that it doesn’t have “exact” flour measurements. I’ll have to re-do it one of these days. The recipe that I like best is this new dough recipe and you do need a stand mixer for that one.
Thank you for sharing your dough recipe! I have tried a few others and they never work out. Always too tough and doesn’t roll thin enough. This one is perfect.
Awesome! Thanks for your comment. I know pelmeni are tough to make as it is, which makes it extra painful when it doesn’t work out. Glad you liked the recipe. I have another recipe for dough that has more exact measurements of flour, but I am glad you liked this one 🙂
wow, so just made pierogies and they turned out AMAZING! I usually eat them after boiling, but my american husband wanted them fried. So I fried them after they cooked. the dough fried reminds me of blini. great great recipe!
That’s wonderful! I’m so glad you liked ’em 🙂
I am so glad I found your site! Currently waiting on the dough to rest before making pierogies. I have had such a hard time finding true russian recipes, spasibo for creating this site! Where I live there are no russian groceries stores or anything so being able to have good russian recipes makes me feel back at home
you do not need and egg if the flour is of the 00 type
Eggs are used in baking to reduce the amount of ash and gluten
By the way, is it a traditional Ukrainian way to make the potato filling with hard cheese like mozarella? In Poland we have pierogis called “ruskie” (Russian style) but we use white (kind of like cottage) cheese instead of hard cheese. I am wondering if it’s our modification or maybe it’s also practiced by dear neighbors, too.
I freeze them when they are raw and when I’m ready to eat them, i just put them in salted boiling water
The cottage cheese type of filling is more traditional. We just like them this way 🙂
Wow, this freezing tip will save me from trouble in future,. I recently made my first pierogis ever, I cooked them and just chucked them in the freezer in the box and a smaller portion in a smaller box. Then after several days I put the frozen small portion in hot water and most of them lost al the filling to the boiling maelstrom. I guess my only hope with the big portion is let it unfreeze and just saute them on a frying pan with the zazharka. But next time I will know better. Do you freeze them when they’re raw or after cooking?
Oh no worries. Take your time. I’m gonna make it with this dough recipe since I have all these ingredients on hand. I’m sure it will be just as good 🙂 And seriously, since I stumbled on your blog, I’ve been literally checking it like every day! Everything just looks so amazing! I wanna make everything!
Thank you Tanya!
Is it possible to make pelmeni without using pork, or will it make the meat too dry?
Pelmeni are made traditionally with beef. I make them with pork and turkey and I know people who just use ground chicken and it turns out good. Hope that helps.
What if I was to mix chicken with turkey or either of these two with beef? Or would that turn out weird tasting?
I don’t think I would try mixing beef with poultry – I haven’t tried it myself but that just doesn’t seem like the best combo. Ps my other recipe uses buttermilk ameboid nice and elastic too.
Do you have that other recipe on this site?
I’m drafting it up. I’m hoping to post it tonight. If you need it sooner I can email it.
I usually mix beef and turkey to make pelmeni filling, kotleti, meatballs, etc. We don’t like pork so this mixture works for us very well.
Will the blueberry and cherry filling leak through with this dough?
I used it for cherry before and it didn’t leak. but I’ll be posting a new, more exact recipe for dough soon.
Sweet! Thank you 🙂 All this time I’ve been using a dough recipe that was so plain but this one seems like it would have a better taste to it. And is it true that the sour cream is put in there to give the dough more elasticity?
Thank you so much for the dough recipe! We used it for our Russia food tour when we were making Pelmeni!!
You’re welcome! That’s very cool! I’m really looking forward to checking out your website as well!
I received a new pelmeni mold that I had ordered in the mail today, so I decided to try out your recipe for dough. The one I usually use is a tiny bit different – but I am really glad I tried yours – they turned out amazing! 🙂
So glad you enjoyed them. Thanks for letting me know 🙂
Hi Natasha!
For me when kneading the dough, I needed at least 2 more cups of flour. This made it still soft and a lot less sticky. I also used full fat yougurt instead of sour cream since I ran out.
Overall, everyone really liked them after I cooked them, but next time I will try to roll the dough a little bit thinner..o well, practice makes progress 🙂 I served them with turkey stock, and fried mushrooms and onions as well.
Have you ever used the pel’meni tool? I am thinking of buying it on ebay or something. It took a lot of time rolling out the dough and making circles with a glass! But this recipe I will be using for sure next time too, thanks!
Hi Marina, thank you for letting me know. The next recipe will have exact flour measurements. I’m glad you enjoyed them. Yes, I do use the pelmeni mold when I make them. I think it’s much easier. We bought ours on ebay. They aren’t very pricey as far as I remember and it was shipped from Ukraine 🙂
Hi Natasha!
I am Russian and my husband is Ukranian, but we both grew up on pel’meni! You are right, when I was in Siberia mom would make lots of those and will freeze it outside in the winter!
We are now in Canada, and before have been buying expensive pel’meni from the Polish store, but now I have more time to cook since kids are in school so I will make this recipe.
This will be my second attempt, I made one a couple of months ago from a recipe from allrecipes.ru, but it did not turn out right (but we ate it anyways:).
I just made the dough and am letting it rest for an hour, I will let you know how it goes!
I hope they are the way you remember them. I am working on another recipe that uses buttermilk and I will put exact measurements for flour since not everyone knows just how the dough should feel when it’s done. I’ll try to get that posted soon.
You know how some ppl make dough in bread makers. Well you think i should follow ur steps or just purt everything in one time and let it do its thing? What do u think? Ever tried that?
I wouldn’t recommend the vareniki dough in a bread maker. If you knead it too much it will become tough, it really doesn’t take long to knead this dough. I do it by hand with a food scraper. I do use the bread maker to make the dough for pirojki and it works well for that, especially since pirojki dough needs to rise in a warm place.
Maybe I missed it, but did you post the recipe for the pelmeni filling? I can’t wait to try it out but I don’t know how to do the filling.
Hi Ben, I haven’t posted it yet, but I do have a very good recipe, here’s the general idea: 1/2 lb pork & 1/2 lb turkey, 1 small onion (minced) & 1 garlic clove (crushed), 1/2 tspn salt and 1/4 tspn pepper, a couple dashes of tobasco sauce (or any hot sauce). Saute onion in a couple tbsp oil for a few minutes till soft, add garlic and saute another minute. Mix everything together and there you have it!
Thanks!
I just wanted to say thank you! I’m an American married to a Ukrainian man, Zahar, and I try so hard to make foods that are from his home. I spent the last summer with him and his family & tried my best to communiate with his mother to get recipes…but it didn’t work out the best with the language barrier…so I found your site and I’ve been so happy to be able to bring some foods from home to table for him! He thanks you too! 🙂 Keep it coming!
You’re both very welcome!
OMG- I know how you feel Brittney. Im American married to Oleg-Russian/Ukranian (moms Russian-dads ukranian). When we got together over 12years ago, it wasn’t too popular to mix cutures. But his mom, though she doesnt speak English, was nearly the only one that liked me.
But, I so understand the language barrier. My mother in law constantly speaks to me in Ruskiy, I’m not sure if she knows I don’t understand much of what shes saying, or if she is just speaking outloud. Whatever the case may be, I feel blessed to have a mother in law that doesnt judge me for being different. She even let me move in with her and her younger child (and she was even a recent widow)when I learned I was pregnant 12 years ago. This is when I discovered my love for Russian food. She would cook me delicious plates of various Russian food several times daily. I can imagine that her decision to take me in as her American daughter, wasnt too popular, but I truly am grateful that she went with her heart.:-)
What a great story. Thanks for sharing that here 🙂
Hey, I love your website.
Props for making these from scratch. I eat so many pelemeni that I could never make enough myself.
THanks for stopping by. Glad you enjoy the site. Do you buy pelmeni premade? I admit I have before too 🙂
Can you make some extra for me and slavel?
I’m making pelmeni for David’s 1st bday.