This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.
Like Borsch or Pirojki, Pelmeni are a classic Slavic tradition. They are commonly made with beef, but I’m changing things up with a juicy chicken filling. These chicken pelmeni are time consuming, but are fun to make when you get your whole crew involved.
The little fingers in your family will love making shapes out of the dough. Try cooking their creative little shapes, butter them up and enjoy with sour cream; they’ll love it! We had Christmas trees and all kinds of critter shapes in the pot. Recruit some muscle to roll out your dough (the Mr. filled this role very well) 😉
Ground chicken thighs the juiciest of all chicken cuts) works best for this recipe. I realize it’s hard to find pre-ground chicken thighs in the supermarket, so if you don’t have a meat grinder to do it yourself, by all means buy ground chicken breast.
Ingredients for the Chicken Pelmeni:
For the dough:
2/3 cup buttermilk
1 Tbsp sour cream
2 cups warm water
2 large eggs
1/2 Tbsp salt
7 cups + about 6 Tbsp unbleached all-purpose flour, plus more to dust
For the Chicken Filling:
(p.s. click here for a Pork & Turkey Filling)
1 3/4 lb ground chicken thigh (leave the fat on if grinding it yourself)
3/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp ground black pepper
2 Tbsp Cooking Oil, or mild olive oil
1 medium onion, finely chopped
3 garlic cloves, pressed
2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley
Ingredients/ Ideas for Toppings:
Butter, melted
Sour cream, vinegar, ketchup
Fresh dill
How to Make Basic Vareniky or Pelmeni Dough:
1. Using the whisk attachment on medium speed, beat together: 2/3 cup buttermilk, 2 cups water, 2 eggs, 1 Tbsp of sour cream, and 1/2 Tbsp salt until well blended.
2. Using the dough hook, mix in 4 cups flour. Mix on speed 2 until well blended.
3. Add 3 more cups of flour one cup at a time, allowing the dough to become well blended with each cup.
4. Add the rest of the flour 1 Tbsp at a time, until the dough is no longer sticking to the the bowl (I used an additional 6 Tbsp flour). Once dough is no longer sticking to the bowl, continue to mix 5 min. (Total mixing time is about 20-25 minutes from the time you first start adding flour). Your dough should be soft and elastic. Cover your dough with plastic wrap or a tea towel to keep it from drying out until ready to use.
How to Make Chicken Pelmeni Filling:
1. Heat 2 Tbsp oil in a medium skillet over med/high heat. Add chopped onion and saute until golden and soft (4-5 min) Add garlic and saute another minute then remove from heat.
2. Mix together: ground chicken 3/4 tsp salt, 1/4 tsp black pepper, 2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley, and sauteed onion and garlic.
A handy tip: The KitchenAid mixer is very useful for mixing ground meat so your fingers don’t turn into popsicles if your meat is cold.
If using a pelmeni mold:
A pelmeni mold will make your life a little easier. It looks like this and you can pelmeni mold on Amazon.
1. Cut off about tennis-ball-size chunks of dough, place over a smooth, lightly floured surface and roll out into a circle that is wider than your mold.
2. Generously flour your mold and place rolled dough over the mold. Fill each pocket of the mold with 1/2 tsp of your filling.
3. (Make your husband) Roll out another chunk of dough and place over the mold. Use a rolling pin to role over the top of the second layer of dough on your mold; working from the center – outwards until the pelmeni are well-defined.
4. Turn the pelmeni maker over and push the pelmeni out with your finger by pushing in the center of each one, or knock the mold against the cutting board to loosen them (if you get so lucky) onto a well-floured cutting board. Kids love popping them out too! If you find any rebel pelmeni with open edges, pinch them to seal or the meat may float out while cooking. Mine turned out nice and plump, but don’t overfill them or they may be hard to pop out of the mold.
If making pelmeni by hand:
1. Shape a portion of the dough into a 1 to 2 -inch thick log. Cut off 1 piece at a time (about gum ball sized) and roll into disks to form a 1.5-inch circle with rolling pin. Sprinkle rolling pin and surface with flour if needed.
2. Place 1 tsp pelmeni filling in the center,
3. Fold the dough in half over the meat and pinch the edges tightly to seal the dough.
4. You should have a half-moon shape. Pinch the two corners together to form your classic ravioli/diaper shape.
Freezing Pelmeni for lazy days:
5. Place pelmeni onto a well-floured cutting board. Arrange pelmeni evenly on the cutting board, sprinkle with flour and place in the freezer.
6. Once they are fully frozen, transfer to large ziploc bags and freeze them for lazier days.
To Cook Chicken Pelmeni:
Bring a pot of water to boil (add 1 Tbsp salt for a large soup pot, or 1 tsp salt for a smaller 4 quart pot). Add fresh or FROZEN (do not defrost) pelmeni and return to a boil. They should float to the top, then boil for 3 minutes longer (or until meat is fully cooked). Drain pelmeni and place them in a clean bowl. Toss pelmeni with butter and sprinkle with parsley or dill (optional). Serve them warm with ketchup, sour cream or vinegar (my personal favorite).
Russian Chicken Pelmeni Recipe

Ingredients
- For the dough:
- 2/3 cup buttermilk
- 1 Tbsp sour cream
- 2 cups warm water
- 2 large eggs
- 1/2 Tbsp salt
- 7 cups + about 6 Tbsp unbleached all-purpose flour, plus more to dust
For the Chicken Filling:
- 1 3/4 lb ground chicken thigh, leave the fat on if grinding it yourself
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1/4 tsp ground black pepper
- 2 Tbsp Cooking Oil, or mild olive oil
- 1 medium onion, finely chopped
- 3 garlic cloves, pressed
- 2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley
Toppings and condiments
- unsalted butter, melted
- Sour cream, vinegar, ketchup
Instructions
Making the Dough:
- Using the whisk attachment on medium speed, beat together: 2/3 cup buttermilk, 1 Tbsp of sour cream, 2 cups warm water, 2 eggs and 1/2 Tbsp salt until well blended.
- Using the dough hook, mix in 4 cups flour. Mix on speed 2 until well blended.
- Add 3 more cups of flour one cup at a time, allowing the dough to become well blended with each cup.
- Add the rest of the flour 1 Tbsp at a time, until the dough is no longer sticking to the the bowl (I used an additional 6 Tbsp flour). Once dough is no longer sticking to the bowl, continue to mix 5 min. (Total mixing time is about 20-25 minutes from the time you first start adding flour). Your dough should be soft and elastic. Cover your dough with plastic wrap or a tea towel until ready to use.
The Chicken Filling
- Heat 1 Tbsp oil in a medium skillet over med/high heat. Add chopped onion and saute until golden and soft (4-5 min) Add garlic and saute another minute then remove from heat.
- Mix together: ground chicken, sauteed onion and garlic, 3/4 tsp salt, 1/4 tsp black pepper and 2 Tbsp chopped parsley. A handy tip: The KitchenAid is very useful for mixing ground meat so your fingers don't turn into popsicles if your meat is cold.
Using a Pelmeni Mold:
- Cut off about tennis-ball-size chunks of dough, place over a smooth, lightly floured surface and roll out into a circle that is wider than your mold. .
- Lightly flour your mold and place rolled dough over the mold. Fill each pocket of the mold with 1/2 tsp of your filling.
- (Make your husband) Roll out another chunk of dough and place over the mold. Use a rolling pin to role over the top of the second layer of dough on your mold; working from the center - outwards until the pelmeni are well-defined.
- Turn the pelmeni maker over and push the pelmeni out onto a well-floured cutting board. If you find any rebel pelmeni with open edges, pinch them to seal or the meat may float out while cooking.
Shaping Pelmeni by hand:
- Shape a portion of the dough into a 1 to 2 -inch thick log. Cut off 1 piece at a time (about gum ball sized) and roll into disks to form a 1.5-inch circle with rolling pin. Sprinkle rolling pin and surface with flour if needed.
- Place 1 tsp pelmeni filling in the center,
- Fold the dough in half over the meat and pinch the edges tightly to seal the dough.
- You should have a half-moon shape. Pinch the two corners together to form your classic ravioli shape.
- Place pelmeni onto a well-floured cutting board. Arrange pelmeni evenly on the cutting board, sprinkle with flour and cook (see instructions below) or place in the freezer.
Freezing Pelmeni:
- Once they are fully frozen, transfer to large ziploc bags and freeze them for lazier days.
Cooking Pelmeni:
- Bring a pot of water to boil (add 1 Tbsp salt for a large soup pot, or 1 tsp salt for a smaller 4 quart pot). Add fresh or FROZEN (do not defrost) pelmeni and return to a boil. They should float to the top, then boil for 3 minutes longer (or until meat is fully cooked). Drain pelmeni and place them in a clean bowl. Toss pelmeni with butter and sprinkle with dill (optional). Serve them warm with ketchup, sour cream or vinegar (my personal favorite).
Hi Natasha, would it be okay to half this recipe?
Hi Ina, yes that would be fine 🙂
Hi Natasha, you think I can use a dough roller for this? Like a pasta dough roller?
Hi Julie, I’ve never tried it that way but I’m concerned that the dough might be too soft and might get stuck in a dough roller. I haven’t tried it though to say for sure. If you test it out, let me know how it goes. It sounds nice if it works! 🙂
Natasha, can I use bread-maker for dough? (Instead of kitchen aid). Thank you!
Hi Tatiana, I haven’t tried it that way but I think it could work, although my bread machine has a warm setting for rising the dough and if yours does too, you might take the dough out before that happens. This dough does not need to proof/rise.
Once again, you’re a lifesaver! My Russian partner’s birthday is on Monday and he’s been pining for this. (Honestly we both have.) Our Russian store stopped selling the good stuff.
I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing 😁.
Natasha can I omit the buttermilk?
The dough turns out softer and tastier with the buttermilk. I haven’t tried buttermilk substitutes, but there are quite a few quick methods of making your own buttermilk, such as this one.
I’m out of buttermilk and was wondering if i can just acidify my milk with vinegar… Would that work? I don’t want to spoil the dough…
Hi Rita, to be honest, I haven’t tried substituting that way so I can’t say for sure. I think it would work but without trying it myself, I’m not 100% sure.
Approximately how many pelemeni do you get from your recipe?
Oh my goodness I can’t believe I didn’t count them. It’s hard to guess but I’d say it’s well over 100.
Hey I was wondering if you could do this dough in the bread machine?? What do you think? Thank you for the recipe by the way!
I haven’t tried making it in the bread machine so I can’t really advise for or against it. My bread machine has a warm setting for rising the dough and if yours does too, you might take the dough out before that happens.
I’m confused on how much salt you add to the dough. The ingredient list says 1/2 tsp but directions say 1 1/2tsp.
help!
Oh sorry for the confusion. 1/2 Tbsp is actually equal to 1 1/2 tsp. I changed the instructions to read 1/2 Tbsp to clarify.
Hello Svetlana,
Can you please give me the recipe for the Oreshki dough? God bless you, thanks:)
This looks and sounds sooo good! And I really miss delicious pelmeni., unfortunately I do not have big enough kitchen to make them myself, otherwise flour makes it a big mess. Does anyone know where can I get truly organic pelmeni? I stand for organic grass fed and cruelty meet only and this makes shopping at Russian stores very limited, cause seems like there is no such thing as “organic” available..
Thank you!
I don’t know any other way than making it with organic ingredients. Maybe someone else knows?
Spasibo 🙂 I know that the best way is to make yourself, but not always working :)) would appreciate any leads
Can I refregirate dough until I’m ready to use in couple hours or so? Or just leave it out covered? What would you suggest
It should be ok for a couple hours at room temperature covered with plastic wrap, but I’d refrigerate if leaving it out longer than that. It’s going to be the softest and most pliable (& easy to roll out) without refrigeration though.
Thank you so much for sharing! 🙂
Здравствуйте! Не знаю можно ли писать здесь по Русски, я по английски не могу писать, понимаю только кода читаю, и то не все, извините меня, Я вот что хотела сказать, у меня також есть пельменница на 91 пельмень и вареничница на 38 вареники и (орешница на 40 орешков в духовку) все формы металические очень хорошие я заказывали их на ” Ebay” вот точное названия как н EBay написано чтобы правильно искать “. Russian Oreshki Орешница 40 FOR OVEN, Pelmeni 91, NEW Vareniki Варенница 38 US” за все три формы $120.00 + пересылка $15.00 отсылают они почтой только в 48 штатов,
Так как я живу на Аляске мне пришлось заказывать на Нюйорк к своему дяде а он мне уже на Аляску немного накладно но по другому невозможно так как они посылают только в 48 штатов
Но я не жалею что заказала эти формы они очень качественно сделаны советую всем заказывать это облегчает работу на кухне, очень удобно
Natasha, these look divine! My only question: the dough really looks like a raised dough, but I don’t see any yeast in the ingredients. Is it really a no-yeast recipe??
Thanks so much!
meli
It only looks that way, but it isn’t a yeast dough and it doesn’t rise. 🙂 Good question!
Hi. I was wondering how long should the dough rise before using it? I must have missed that part.
You can start using it right away but make sure to keep the dough covered while not in use so it doesn’t dry out.
Though they are time consuming this recipe was really delicious I loved it and can’t wait for my husband to try it. Thanks Natasha for the recipe
They are a nice treat once in a while 🙂 It definitely helps if you have several pairs of hands helping out. I hope your husband loves them! 🙂
recipes look great, plan to try several of them, Keep them coming
I hope you love everything you try! 🙂
are there further secrets for making them healthy yet even more tasty?
i’m trying making them for the first time soon after having bad results making the Jewish kreplah
Hmmm,… not that I can think of besides buying organic flour.
Great recipe! We found that as written, it made about 260 pelmeni–which lasted and lasted in the freezer, perfect for quick lunches/dinnners as well. I do think the picture should show the mold *covered* with flour before the dough is applied–after the first “punching out” experience, we saturated the mold with flour each time (up to 1/4 cup) and then you didn’t even need to TOUCH the pelmeni–just flip them onto a cookie sheet and gravity pulls them out. Much easier! Then use the leftover flour for your next bread–no waste 🙂 Thanks for a delicious recipe!
That’s so true! Flouring it up makes it way easier! I’ll put that in bold face on the recipe and try to remember to insert that new picture next time I make these 😉 Thanks for your great feedback 🙂