Recipe By : Wolff's Kasha
Serving Size : 4 Preparation Time :0:40
Categories : Jewish
Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
2 large onions -- sliced in rounds
2 tablespoons margarine or chicken fat -- (2 to 3)
1 large egg or egg white -- slightly beaten
1 cup medium or coarse kasha
2 cups water or bouillon
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste
3/4 pound large or small bow tie-shaped noodles
2 tablespoons chopped fresh parsley
2 tablespoons chopped fresh coriander (optional)
1. Saute the onions in 2 tablespoons of the margarine or chicken fat in a
heavy frying pan with a cover until golden. Remove to a plate.
2. Beat the egg in a small mixing bowl and stir in the kasha. Mix, making
sure all the grains are coated. Put the kasha in the same frying pan, set
over a high heat. Flatten, stir, and break up the egg-coated kasha with a
fork or wooden spoon for 2 to 4 minutes or until the egg has dried on the
kasha and the kernels brown and mostly separate.
3. Add the water or bouillon, salt, and pepper to the frying pan and bring
to a boil. Add the onions, cover tightly, and cook over low heat, steaming
the kasha for 10 minutes. Remove the cover, stir, and quickly check to see
if the kernels are tender and the liquid has been absorbed. If not, cover
and continue steaming for 3 to 5 minutes more.
4. Meanwhile, bring a large pot of water to a boil. Cook the bow-tie noodles
according to the directions on the package. Drain.
5. When the kasha is ready, combine with the noodles. Adjust the seasoning,
sprinkle with the parsley and coriander. If desired, add a bit more
margarine or chicken fat.
Makes: 6 to 8 servings
(M)w/chicken fat/bouillon; (P)w/margarine/water
In 1925 Wolff Brothers of Paterson, New Jersey, published a Yiddish English
cook book with recipes culled from a kasha cooking contest run in all the
Jewish newspapers throughout the country. "Recipes of thousands of Jewish
dishes were sent us," they wrote modestly, "but we selected only the very
best among them and these are listed here." The recipes included buckwheat
blintzes, vegetarian buckwheat cutlets, and "a tasteful grits soup" made
from their Health Food (merely unroasted buckwheat groats), green peas, and
potatoes. The varnishke recipe was basically a kreplach-type noodle stuffed
with kasha, buckwheat groats, and gribenes.
Packaged bow-tie noodles,large and small, quickly replaced the flat homemade
egg noodles in the American version of kasha varnishkes. The trick to a good
kasha varnishke is to toast the whole-grain buckwheat groat well over a high
heat for 2 to 4 minutes until you start smelling the aroma of the kasha.
This will seal the groats so that there is a nutty, crunchy taste to them, a
good foil to the soft taste of the noodles. When I make mine - a favorite in
my family - I add fresh parsley and sometimes coriander. Although
traditionalists use bow-tie noodles for this, try rigatoni, shells, or any
other kind of noodle you like.
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Per serving: 15 Calories; less than one gram Fat (5% calories from fat);
1g Protein; 3g Carbohydrate; 0mg Cholesterol; 276mg Sodium
NOTES : SOURCE: "Jewish Cooking in America" by Joan Nathan
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