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Russian Pelmeni Recipe + New Dough!

A green plate with Russian pelmeni garnished with dill

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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!).

Two eggs and milk in a mixer

Salt added into mixing bowl with Russian pelmeni mixture

2. Switch to dough hook and add 4 cups flour. Mix on speed 2 until well blended.

Floured added into a mixing bowl

A mixing bowl with mixture for pelmeni dough

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).

A mixing bowl with pelmeni dough

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.

Onions being sautéed in a skillet

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.

Meat mixture in a mixer for Russian pelmeni  

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.

A pelmeni tray with dough on it and meat being filled into the holes

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.

Pelmeni being shaped in a mold

5. Turn the pelmeni maker over and push the pelmeni out onto a well-floured cutting board.

Pelmeni being taken out of a mold

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.

Pelmeni on a floured cutting board

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,

A dough circle with meat being placed into the center

3. lose the edges and pinch together.

A Russian pelmeni being shaped by hand

4. Pinch the corners to gether to form, well… a diaper shape.

Handmade and shaped pelmeni

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!

4.92 from 92 votes
Author: Natasha of NatashasKitchen.com
Prep Time: 2 hours
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours 10 minutes

Ingredients 

Servings: 180 + pelmeni

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).
Course: Main Course
Cuisine: Russian, Ukrainian
Keyword: Russian Pelmeni
Skill Level: Medium
Cost to Make: $
Natasha's Kitchen Cookbook

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Natasha Kravchuk

Welcome to my kitchen! I am Natasha, the creator behind Natasha's Kitchen (established in 2009), and I share family-friendly, authentic recipes. I am a New York Times Best-Selling cookbook author and a trusted video personality in the culinary world. My husband, Vadim, and I run this blog together, ensuring every recipe we share is thoroughly tested and approved. Our mission is to provide you with delicious, reliable recipes you can count on. Thanks for stopping by! I am so happy you are here.

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4.92 from 92 votes (24 ratings without comment)

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Comments

  • Victoria
    July 19, 2020

    Thank you so much for this recipe. My grandmother used to make it for the family and I was feeling nostalgic. I’ve made it a few times and it is so so good! Thank you for sharing 🙂

    Reply

    • Natasha's Kitchen
      July 20, 2020

      You are so welcome, Victoria. So happy to read your comments and so glad you loved it!

      Reply

  • Marina
    April 3, 2020

    This time has millennials making their own pelmenis and pirogis. Thank you Natasha for having our backs with perfect recipes as always! Flavors are exactly like momma used to make it

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      April 3, 2020

      You’re welcome, Marina! Thank you for sharing that with us!

      Reply

  • Alisa
    March 17, 2020

    thank you thank you so much finally yummy dough recipes. Growing up it was simple eggs and water, sometimes milk or no eggs just water and flour dough.Butter milk makes it so good. I didn’t have sour cream even without turned out so good. I used regular flour and chicken/pork for stuffing. This is now my only to go recipe and I’m going to use it to make vareniki

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      March 17, 2020

      You’re welcome, Alisa! Thank you so much for sharing that with me.

      Reply

  • S.T.A.L.K.E.R.
    February 26, 2020

    Poshel nahui dis is so good.
    Can you pls make a recipe for Cheburek?Or for some semenchki halva?

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      February 26, 2020

      I’m so glad you enjoyed that. We have a Cheburekirecipe here you may enjoy.

      Reply

  • Anneta Kondenko
    January 13, 2020

    This recipe is so amazing I’ve been using this recipe for the past 2 years:) I have a question do you know where you can buy pelemeniasta mold 91 piece? I have the small one for 36 piece and really want to get the big one..:)

    Reply

    • Natasha
      January 13, 2020

      Hi Anneta, I’m so happy you love this pelmeni recipe. I haven’t been able to find a bigger one, unfortunately. If you track one down, let me know!

      Reply

    • Alisa
      March 17, 2020

      amazon has tons of molds

      Reply

  • Emily Khakhalkin
    November 26, 2019

    I just made this, I used different meat for the filling but it was really good. My husband is Russian and he loved it. I have made pelmeni several times and this was the best recipe I have used
    Thanks.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      November 27, 2019

      You’re welcome! I’m so happy you enjoyed it, Emily!

      Reply

  • Matias Kronhardt
    October 27, 2019

    No bay leaf?

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      October 28, 2019

      You are welcome to add that!

      Reply

  • Katie
    October 21, 2019

    Can I use beef instead of pork?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      October 21, 2019

      Hi Katie, we love the combination but you can use only beef.

      Reply

  • Katie
    October 21, 2019

    Natasha, can I substitute the pork for turkey?

    Reply

    • Natasha
      October 21, 2019

      Hi Katie, yes, you can change things up and try different meats in the filling.

      Reply

  • Tania
    October 11, 2019

    Hi Natasha, can you add metric measurements to your recipe. Thanks in advance.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      October 11, 2019

      Hi Tania, We are currently working on adding metric measurements to all of our recipes but it is taking some time as we have to add them one at a time. Thank you so much for being patient! In the meantime, check out our post on measuring which should help

      Reply

  • Jen
    September 13, 2019

    I’ve tried this dough recipe three times and all three times it’s been a huge fail. The dough is too stretchy and springy for Pelmeni. I’m sorry but this is a bad recipe for its purpose. I’m sure it’s good for other things.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      September 14, 2019

      Hi Jen, I’m sorry to hear you are having trouble. I wonder if any substitutions were made in the recipe? It could be due to using a different type of flour with different gluten content, also it could be too much or too little flour added. This post on measuring ingredients may help.

      Reply

  • Kristina
    August 10, 2019

    Thank you for this recipe, I can always count on your recipes . I make my dough with regular bleached AP flour (that is what I had on hand) and without buttermilk (didn’t have any on hand) and the dough turned out perfect- silky smooth and didn’t fall apart.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      August 10, 2019

      I’m so happy to hear that! Thank you for sharing your great review!

      Reply

  • Liana
    July 29, 2019

    Two questions for you Natasha, if you don’t mind. Several people, including you, mention Canadian flour. I graduated culinary school, & I’m shocked I haven’t heard about that kind of flour. Though I was on the culinary arts side of things & just took one baking & pastry arts class, the intro class so maybe that’s why. Can you shed more light on Canadian flour & how it differs from AP flour? Also the link you post for the pelmeni mold/ maker is a plastic one yet the one in your picture is metal. Do you have a link for that one? I saw plenty of metal ones on Amazon but all of them had a few negative reviews mentioning metal shavings getting in/ on the pelmeni & I don’t want that & want something of better quality.
    Thanks so much Natasha.

    Reply

    • Natasha
      July 29, 2019

      Hi Liana, Canadian flour (flour made in Canada), tends to have a higher concentration of gluten which is why a recipe that calls for Canadian flour will actually require more all-purpose flour for the same recipe if substituted. The pelmeni mold we use is metal and I haven’t had any issues with it. I haven’t experimented with a plastic pelmeni mold but I imagine those would work just as well.

      Reply

  • Vika
    June 21, 2019

    I made those with half beef half pork. Beautiful dough although it took about 1-2 cups more of flour before it stopped sticking ! Dough was bouncing back slightly while rolling ( not too much ) should I use less flour next time? It tastes great ones cooked and didn’t rip!! Thx!

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      June 21, 2019

      Hi Vika, without being there it is hard to say. I recommend checking our post on measuring to be sure you have the right amount of flour.

      Reply

  • Joshua Tapia
    June 4, 2019

    About how much Pelmeni does this make, I’m making it to bring to a class of about 35 people.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      June 4, 2019

      Hi Joshua, This recipe makes 180+ pelmeni.

      Reply

      • Joshua Tapia
        June 4, 2019

        That’s awesome, thanks.

        Reply

  • Hannah
    April 4, 2019

    I want to try to make these for a class at school. Is there anyway I could make the dough the night before and use it the next day in class? The class is my last class, so it would have to sit either on a counter or in the fridge for around 16 hours.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      April 4, 2019

      Hi Hannah, I hope you find this helpful, the dough will be the softest and easiest to work with if you use it fresh. I have refrigerated the dough and subsequently used it to cook just pieces of the dough (dumplings) since it’s too tough for me to roll out at that point. It works best to make all of the pelmeni and freeze half of them once they are fully made. It’s alot of work, but it’s worthwhile

      Reply

      • Hannah
        April 6, 2019

        What if I were to roll out and cut the circles and then refrigerate it? I definitely won’t have time to make the dough in class so I’m looking for an alternative.

        Reply

        • Natashas Kitchen
          April 6, 2019

          I haven’t tested that Hannah, I worry that would dry out the dough. If you experiment, let me know how you liked the recipe

          Reply

          • Hannah
            April 26, 2019

            I finally have a chance to get back to you about the dough! I ended up making the dough and filling some of them so that if it turned out not to work, I would still have some. With the leftover dough, I rolled it out, cut it into the circles (I used a cup for that!), separated them with squares of wax paper and put them in a tupperware with a piece of Saran Wrap between the lid to hopefully seal in more moisture. I put them in the fridge and used it to make “dessert” pelmeni with some caramel and chocolate a few days later. The dough almost felt softer! Thanks so much for this great recipe!

          • Natashas Kitchen
            April 26, 2019

            You’re so welcome! & Thank you for sharing that with me!

  • Yelena Sukhovetskaya
    February 19, 2019

    Can I used almond flour or coconut flour for this recipe instead of all purpose flour?

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      February 19, 2019

      Hi Yelena, I honestly haven’t tried making this gluten-free (with coconut or almond flour). My sister’s mother in law made them gluten-free but I don’t know what kind of flour she used specifically. They were a little bit grainy but still good. I just haven’t tested it so I can’t really tell you. Sorry I can’t be more helpful!

      Reply

  • Natasha
    January 31, 2019

    Natasha, do I have to freeze pelmeni? I am having a party where we will get around the table to make them and i would like to cook them right away.

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      January 31, 2019

      Yes of course! They are so so good fresh! you will need to cut the cook time slightly but that would work great!

      Reply

  • Valeria Weiss
    January 17, 2019

    Hi Natasha, thank you for your recepies, because they give really reproducable results. Is anyting you can suggest for manti (steam dumpling)?

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      January 18, 2019

      Hi Valeria, I haven’t tried that so I can’t advise. I’m so happy you enjoyed this recipe!

      Reply

  • Michele
    January 9, 2019

    I was glad to see your alternative dough recipe. I have been using one from a Ukrainian friend’s mother, which uses sweet milk and oil. Normally one sees varenniki, pierogi and pelmeni dough recipes which use the same ingredients as Italian pasta dough–practically impossible to roll out by hand!

    Reply

    • Natashas Kitchen
      January 9, 2019

      That’s so great!

      Reply

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