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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.





Thank you for the wonderful site. My russian friend’s Mom made pierogi’s at Christmas time and I was lucky enough too be at the right place at the right time and got my first taste of these wonderful treats. She had several fillings that were all wonderful, but my favorite one was pork and sauerkraut. Have you every heard of this or know its name.
I’ve heard of vareniki with sauerkraut and that does sound really good! Were the once you are talking about baked, deep fried or boiled?
I was wondering if there is a way to make this dough using stand mixer?
If you want to make a dough that requires the stand mixer, I’d recommend this one: https://natashaskitchen.com/2011/05/09/russian-pelmeni-recipe-new-dough-recipe/
Very nice post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wished to say that I’ve really enjoyed browsing your blog posts.
In any case I will be subscribing to your rss feed and I hope
you write again soon!
Welcome to the site Krista :).
Natasha I just want to say that I made the blueberry vareniki for the first time and they came out perfect! My husband loved them and they will definitely be made again soon. Thank you for your wonderful instructions 🙂
Oh goodness blueberry vareniki sound so good!! Man, when am I not hungry? lol I’m so glad you enjoyed them 🙂
Hi i was wondering if you can use this dough recipe with Amish cheese/ homemade cheese for filling. Love all of your recipes!
Thanks!
You can but you probably want to sweeten it up a little 🙂 is it the tvorog/ farmers cheese?
Can gluten free flour be used for this recipe?
I haven’t tried it with gluten-free flour so I’m not sure if the measurements should be different or if the dough would still be soft with gluten-free.
Hi Natasha! I tried this dough recipe for vareniki yeasterday and I loved it. the only thing I would change about it I would add 1 tsp of salt and 1 tbsp of olive oil. Thanks for all the great recipes!
I’ll have to try your modification. Thanks Inna! 🙂
ok thanx:) its just how my mom usually made them and i love it that way:)
i have a question can i make these na paru?? not boil them???
I haven’t tried it, but I think that would be a different recipe. Let me know if you try it.
Noticed your mention of “pierogie” in the context of pelmeni and varenniki. Pelmeni and varenniki are nowhere close to “pierogie” – unless you are speaking Polish and referencing Polish cuisine. In Russia/Russian the word “pierogie” is a plural form and actually applies to large rectangular sheet pies (singular – “pierog”) made using pastry or yeast dough with meat, cabbage, or other fillings. They are cut into pieces and eaten with utensils. Smaller sized “pieroshki” made using similar doughs can be baked or fried in oil – similar fillings. These are hand sized and eaten with your fingers. Smaller sized “pieroshki” are usually served accompanying soup.
Pierogi is American name for varenniki. They also called that way in Polish cuisine. American reader won’t search for vareniki, but for pierogi, so that’s why I have multiple names.
Hi Natasha, my mother was from Belarus and I remember she made the Cherry Knedliky with yeast in the dough. Have you ever heard of them made with yeast?
Is that like a baked cherry piroshki version? https://natashaskitchen.com/2012/07/22/buchty-sweet-cherry-filled-buns/
The moment I saw there was Sour Cream in your dough I knew it was authentic, and not another Polish Pierogi Dough Recipe.
Dear Natasha,
Thank you so much for posting these great recipes. I’m going to try and make the Cherry Varenekies first. I was born in Russia and my babushka used to make the cherry ones and the strawberry ones as well. Well know I now live in NJ and married to an American man. But he’s willing to try almost any kind of food. Do you think it will be okay if I used the dark pittied cherries that come in a can, it’s hard to find the other kind.
Sabina
P.S. I’m dying to show this web site to my mom, she’ll get a big kick out of it.
Thank you Sabina! Yes the canned cherries will work great, just drain well and add more sugar if they are very sour. Hope you love them!
I happened upon your website by chance. I’m from Winnipeg, Canada, which has a large Ukrainian (and probably Russian too :~> ) population. I now live in Dallas and miss many of the tasty foods that my friends who are Ukrainian made for any of the holidays when we had dinner parties.
I’ve only started to browse your website, but so far I am very impressed!!
Thank you! I’m so glad you like the site! I hope our family favorites will become yours.
Thank you!! sounds good! I’ll try it out 🙂
I was also wondering.. I had some dough left over for how long do u think can I refrigerate it for?
Cover it well with plastic wrap and it should be just fine at least a week. Try Rolling it into a log and cutting off 1/3 inch pieces and boiling till they rise to the top; excellent and easy dumplings. Just butter ’em up!
Well I tried this one today and it turned out perfect 🙂 thanks 🙂
Awesome! So glad to hear that 🙂
Does the recipe say if u use one cup of water to use one cup of milk with it? Or its either the milk or water which ever one u want to put in?
Yeah; that was a little confusing. Sorry. It’s either:
3/4 cups water and 1 1/4 cups 2% milk
OR
1 cup water and 1 cup whole milk
I have another recipe posted with more exact flour ingredients that I’ve been using; it does require a mixer though;
That is so nice of you to share the Russian recepies with other people, my hubby loves pel’meni, but we do the filling with chicken, you should try it, i”m sure you’ll like it, but thanx for the dough, i’m gonna try it with the soure cream like you do, sometimes this week. God Bless you
Luba, thank you!! God bless you too! What do you mix in with the chicken? Any sauteed onion or just salt and pepper?
Hey, do you cook and then freeze them or freeze them before cooking?
Freeze them before cooking 🙂