This post may contain affiliate links. Read my disclosure policy.
This recipe is for Russian Pelmeni along with a NEW dough recipe! This dough is softer, tastier and has more exact measurements. I strongly recommend a KitchenAid Mixer for the job. It’s the workhorse of the kitchen. A pelmeni mold also speeds up the process.
They can be purchased on Amazon. Pelmeni are a royal pain in the bottom to make. They are however, cheap and tasty – and you’ll recall your childhood (detstvo vspomnish). You will have enough for about 6 dinners with this recipe, so if you are up for suffering through the process once, you will have a nice stash of these in the freezer.
Serve these in a good quality chicken broth, or boil and butter them up, then dip in sour cream, vinegar or ketchup.
Ingredients for Russian Pelmeni Dough:
2/3 cups buttermilk
1 Tbsp sour cream
2 large eggs
2 cups warm water
1 1/2 tsp salt
7 cups plus 6 Tbsp unbleached all-purpose flour
Ingredients for Pelmeni Filling:
1 lb ground turkey
1 lb ground pork
1 medium onion, finely diced
1 Tbsp olive oil
3 garlic cloves, pressed
1/2 tsp ground pepper
3/4 tsp salt
1 tsp hot sauce, optional
Ingredients/ Ideas for Toppings:
Butter, melted
Sour cream, vinegar, ketchup
How to Make Basic Vareniky or Pelmeni Dough:
1. Using the whisk attachment on medium speed, mix together: 2/3 cup buttermilk, 1 Tbsp of sour cream 2 cups warm water, 2 eggs and 1 1/2 tsp salt until well blended (please excuse the fact that this picture has the paddle attachment – I hauled my mixer to my sister’s house to make these and forgot the whisk!).
2. Switch to dough hook and add 4 cups flour. Mix on speed 2 until well blended.
3. Add 3 more cups of flour (one cup at a time and wait for 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 sides of the bowl (I used 6 Tbsp). Once it is no longer sticking to the bowl, continue to mix 5 minutes. (Total mixing time is about 20 minutes from the time you start adding flour).
4. Place the dough on a lightly floured surface.
How to Make Pelmeni Filling:
1. Heat 1 Tbsp oil in a medium skillet. Add onion and saute until golden and soft. Add garlic and saute another minute.
2. Mix together pork, turkey, onion & garlic mix, 3/4 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp ground pepper and 1 tsp hot sauce (optional).
The KitchenAid is very useful for mixing meat as well, so your hands don’t freeze even if your meat is cold.
If using a pelmeni mold:
1. Cut off about tennis-ball-size chunks of dough and roll out into a circle.
2. Place over mold. Place 1/2 tsp meat into each pocket space on the mold.
3. Roll out another chunk of dough and place over the mold.
4. Use a rolling pin, roll the top, working from the center – outwards until the pelmeni are well-defined.
5. Turn the pelmeni maker over and push the pelmeni out onto a well-floured cutting board.
6. Arrange pelmeni evenly on the cutting board, sprinkle with flour and place in the freezer. Pinch together any open edges on pelmeni or the meat will float out during cooking.
7. Once they are fully frozen, put them in large ziploc bags, sprinkle with flour and freeze them for future enjoyment.
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. lose the edges and pinch together.
4. Pinch the corners to gether to form, well… a diaper shape.
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, put them in large ziploc bags, sprinkle with flour and freeze them for future enjoyment.
To Cook 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 FROZEN 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).
Russian Pelmeni Recipe + New Dough Recipe!

Ingredients
Ingredients for Pelmeni Dough:
- 2/3 cups buttermilk
- 1 Tbsp sour cream
- 2 large eggs
- 2 cups warm water
- 1 1/2 tsp salt
- 7 cups plus 6 Tbsp unbleached all-purpose flour
Ingredients for Pelmeni Filling:
- 1 lb ground turkey
- 1 lb ground pork
- 1 medium onion, finely diced
- 1 Tbsp olive oil
- 3 garlic cloves, pressed
- 1/2 tsp ground pepper
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 1 tsp hot sauce, optional
Ingredients/ Ideas for Toppings:
- Melted butter, sour cream, vinegar, ketchup
Instructions
How to Make Basic Vareniky or Pelmeni Dough:
- Using the whisk attachment on medium speed, mix together: 2/3 cup buttermilk, 1 tbsp of sour cream 2 cups warm water, 2 eggs and 1 1/2 tsp salt until well blended
- Switch to dough hook and add 4 cups flour. Mix on speed 2 until well blended.
- Add 3 more cups of flour (one cup at a time and wait for 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 sides of the bowl (I used 6 Tbsp). Once it is no longer sticking to the bowl, continue to mix 5 minutes. (Total mixing time is about 20 minutes from the time you start adding flour).
- Place the dough on a lightly floured surface.
How to Make Pelmeni Filling:
- Heat 1 tbsp oil in a medium skillet. Add onion and saute until golden and soft. Add garlic and saute another minute.
- Mix together pork, turkey, onion & garlic mix, 3/4 tsp salt, 1/2 tsp ground pepper and 1 tsp hot sauce (optional).
If using a pelmeni mold:
- Cut off about tennis-ball-size chunks of dough and roll out into a circle.
- Place over mold. Place 1/2 tsp meat into each pocket space on the mold.
- Roll out another chunk of dough and place over the mold.
- Use a rolling pin, roll the top, 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.
- Arrange pelmeni evenly on the cutting board, sprinkle with flour and place in the freezer. Pinch together any open edges on pelmeni or the meat will float out during cooking.
- Once they are fully frozen, put them in large ziploc bags, sprinkle with flour and freeze them for future enjoyment.
If making 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,
- Close the edges and pinch together.
- Pinch the corners together to form, well... a diaper shape.
- Place pelmeni onto a well-floured cutting board. Arrange pelmeni evenly on the cutting board, sprinkle with flour and place in the freezer.
- Once they are fully frozen, put them in large ziploc bags, sprinkle with flour and freeze them for future enjoyment.
To Cook 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 FROZEN pelmeni and return to a boil. They should float to the top, then boil for 3 mintues 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).
Can you please suggest ideas of what to do with leftover meat filling from the pelmeni recipe? I read in the comments that you’ve cooked the leftover dough as dumplings, but I’m looking for suggestions about how to use up the remaining meat mixture. Any EASY suggestions?? Thank you!
Hi Terry. There are several options. Some have rolled the meat into balls and boiled it into a simple soup. Some have made vareniki. I imagine there are several other uses for this. 🙂
The meat recipe for pelmeni seems very similar to the Katleti, just add the bread crumbs. That’s what i would do with the leftovers 🙂
Hi Natasha! Thank you for your beautiful recipes:) my husband is czech and he made pelmeni by your recipe yesterday and they work out amazing. It was his first time ever making them as he wanted to surprise me. How sweet of him. Pelmeni was my favorite food from my childhood. Now I have went through all you site and completely hooked! Thanks a lot for all the effort your husband and you are doing
I’m so inspired reading your review. Thank you! I’m so happy you discovered our blog and can make recipes and favorite foods from your childhood! Enjoy!!
I should have read Terry’s comment first, flouring the mold is definitely a good idea, but they are so much fun and much easier using a mold than by hand. I just made some more with some thawed out dough and they seem fine!
I’m so happy you found that! Thank you for this feedback, Angela!
Natasha! I can’t believe it took me this long to make my own pelmeni and oh my, they were amazing!!! Thank you for your recipe! I used a pork/veal ratio and my family went crazy for them!! My 6 year old thought they were amazing. The baby gobbled them up and my husband keeps going back to make a few more. Great recipe and I’ll be sure to add this into my dinner rotation! Thank you!!!
What an amazing review, Lisa! Thank you!! I’m so happy to hear your entire family enjoyed this!!
Hi , will you please post a photo of some of the last step of dough mixing and what it looks like when it doesn’t STICK. I’m in the middle of making the dough and it kept sticking to the bowl of the kitchenaid— even though I added almost another whole cup of flour! (So, 8 cups of flour) before it finally quit sticking to the bowl.
Now the dough is rising up over the top of the hook when I turn the mixer on (so i can’t mix for the additional 5 minutes.)
Should i throw it all away and start over? Ughhh. Thanks for any tips. I really really want to make these successfully!
Hi Terry! If your dough is sticky, you probably just need to add a little more flour. What kind of flour did you use? Different flour measures out differently. Was it Canadian flour by chance? I just used an all-purpose unbleached flour. Next time, add flour a little bit at a time until it’s a little sticky to the touch but doesn’t stick to your fingers. I hope that helps.
Thank you for the reply. I did use all purpose unbleached flour as indicated. So, I honestly don’t know why it needed so much more. I went ahead and rolled it out and used pelmeni molds. I put it all in the freezer to cook another day so i don’t know how they turned out!
Anyway, I learned a couple tips: 1). It helps to sprinkle the mold with flour so the pelmeni will drop out of the mold easier.
2). It would be smart to divide up all the dough into the right amount of tennis ball size portions at the beginning of the rolling. I must have made my tennis balls too large in the beginning and had a lot of excess roll off the sides of the mold. Then I had to gather up the scraps at the end to have enough dough for the remaining filling (which was much harder to roll out the second time!)
My pleasure! I hope it works out better for you next time!
I’ve made quite a few of your recipes the last couple years and loved them all! I got a pelmeni mold this time and I’m glad I did, it saves so much time and the dumplings are way cuter. Thank you for all the great recipes!! 😊
That mold definitely speeds up the process! I’m so happy to hear you enjoy our recipes! Thank you!
At last, I have something to justify buying this fancy, expensive mixer! I found this recipe upon returning to Australia from a holiday in Germany where my Latvian-born German friend introduced me to his favourite dish. The dough recipe is perfect! And easy to work with, but I have a Mold in the post that will make it much easier, I’m sure. Thank you so much 😊
You’re so welcome Angela! I’m so happy you discovered our blog and this recipe! The fancy mixer definitely makes this much easier and quicker to make!
Can you make this with just an electric hand mixer?
Hi Elisabeth! You can make the dough for both by hand. I would not recommend an electric hand mixer since those are not suitable for mixing doughs and it would likely break your mixer.
is there a smaller serving i could make in an hour if there is please email me logangarth24@gmail.com thank you
Hi Logan, you are more than welcome to halve the recipe however the dough will still need some time to set.
So happy I found your site. I can not wait to try making your your dough. My mother in-law passed this recipe on to me before she passed away. Only thing we do different that my husbands Hungarian grandmother passed on was we cook them in beef broth and serve as a soup.
Hi Karri! Thank you so much for sharing that with me! Yes sometimes it is eaten with a flavorful broth and serves as a soup 🙂
I will definitely try making the dough. We use wanton wrappers when making dough is not an option.
How does it turn out with the wonton dough? Does it cook through with out falling apart?
I don’t know if you still read these blogs / reviews/ comments butt I’m going to share this with you. I grew up in the United States with a Russian grandmother a French mother who died when I was just a child, which brings me to my next point. I was sent to my grandmother’s as a young two year old child and eating her food I fell in love! my brother and I shared many memories but most of all the food. We did not know the actual name and called it something different which I later learned the recipe for because I went back to visit my grandmother before she died, which she was in France at that time and also where we stayed with her I was so happy and excited to see something that resemble and sounded like what we were taught as a child. Though the recipe is different – extremely different. She used mutton and pork as the meats. Using spearmint duck eggs Etc. I have remade these products here in the United States for many years for my family not to even come close to that flavor now I will try again. Let me know if you actually read this. my email address is Gina Rivers 94 at yahoo.com. I am dictating this there for my phone doesn’t actually write it out
Hi Gina! Yes we read everyones comments and do our best to reply. I thank you for sharing your history I’m so happy you discovered out blog and are able to make a connection to your roots. Yes, There are several variations to this recipe and I’ve seen pork, beef, lamb, chicken etc used as a filling. 🙂 I hope you find a recipe similar to what you tried back then! Thank you for sharing this with us Gina!
Would it be fine to substitute the buttermilk with kefir?
Hi Olivia! I haven’t tested that substitution to compare but from what I know about kefir, it should work as a substitute. Let me know how it goes.
If I want to make them and eat them immediately afterwards, will it affect the taste? Do they need to be frozen before cooking or can I cook them fresh?
Hi Stephanie, these can be boiled and eaten fresh. I included a freezer option since we usually don’t eat the entire batch but they do freeze really well! 🙂
The best pelmeni recipe! Our family loves them😋I just add about 3/4 cup of cold mineral water. This is the hack for juiciness 😊You should try it. Thank you for the recipe!!!
You’re welcome Olga! I’m happy to hear your family enjoys the recipe as much as mine does. Thanks for sharing your excellent review!
My boss had a grit idea I thought I’d share. He fills a jerky gun with the meat mixture and uses that the fill them. He said it worked great.
Great suggestion, thanks for sharing!
I remember my mom and I sitting at the table making pelmeni, only difference is she used pork and ground hamburger. When she came to visit me, she took the short cut and bought the wonton, pre-made dough from the Asian market. It comes frozen, not as good, but works.
I’m happy the recipe brings back fond memories! If you decide to give this recipe a try, please let me know what you think!
We sometimes don’t drain the water, we eat it as soup… It’s so good!!!
Yum, great suggestion Angelina! Thanks for sharing 🙂
Hi Natasha! Do you think plain whole milk kefir would work instead of the buttermilk?
Hi Laura, yes that would work great 🙂
Hi Natasha! If I use beef instead of turkey and pork would you recommend to change proportions of other ingredients (like add more onions to make the filling juicier/softer) or add anything else? Thanks for the recipe! Tatiana
Hi Tatiana, I would suggest using beef not is not too lean. You can add more of the other filling ingredients if you like – I think it would still work well to keep it moist.
how many servings dose it make
This recipe makes 180+ pelmeni.
Any suggestions what I could serve with pelmeni in order to make it a more balanced meal? I’m struggling to come up with something that will pare well.
Hi Katerina, I would pick a fresh salad – maybe something like our Cucumber Tomato Salad – you can explore all of our salads here. These cucumbers would also be really good!
I am pregnant and CRAVING this right now. Seriously I would kidnap a russian grandma just to have her make me these as there is no place around here that sells anything russian. Natasha think I can pay and you ship them out? lol
LOL pregnant women do some interesting things! ha ha!! That gave me a good laugh. Congratulations on your pregnancy!! 🙂