Bryndza Pierogi (Bryndzové Pirohy)
Ingredients: about 2 potatoes, some 2 cups flour, one egg, salt, bacon, bryndza
Prep Time: 30 minutes
Pirohy (pierogi) are not as common in Slovakia as in, let’s say Poland. There they are stuffed with all kinds of fillings. There are pierogi filled with meat, mashed potatoes, curd cheese, onions, or even sweet jams. But one kind you will surely find on your travels in Slovakia are bryndzové pirohy, pierogi filled with the special Slovak sheep cheese, bryndza. This cheese is also used to make the Slovak national dish, bryndzové halušky.
My family did not use to make pirohy. But lucky for me, a lady named Helka helps out in my dad’s restaurant and she makes amazing pirohy. So I had her show me how they are made. Below is the recipe for the authentic Slovak pierogi. All the cooking was done by eye, so the above ingredients are only my best estimates.
Start by cooking few potatoes (zemiaky). Cook them until they are quite soft and mash them by hand. Add about a cup of flour (múka), one egg (vajce) and about a tablespoon of salt (soľ). Mix everything together by hand. Then add more flour until you get a fairly stiff mixture. Also place a large pot full of salted water onto the stove.
Form the dough into a loaf and place it onto a dusted board. Dust top with flour to prevent the pin from sticking. Roll out to an about 3 millimeters thick pancake.
Then take a drinking glass and cut out circles. Do this by pushing down with the glass and twisting your wrist left and right few times. The dough will come out with the glass. Top each circle with a teaspoon worth of bryndza. If you don’t have bryndza, you can imitate it by mixing feta with sour cream.
Fold the circle over and pinch the seal closed with the tip of your fingers. Then, to make the pirohy look prettier, grab the seal between your fingers and twist about 60 degrees. Do this at few spots.
Place pierogi into the pot of boiling water. I found it really neat that Helka uses the same technique for transporting dumplings as my grandma – by placing them onto the back side of her arm. Right after placing them in water, scoop them up with a wooden spoon to keep them from sticking to the bottom. Pierogi are ready when they float to the top. Scoop them out using a large strainer.
Bryndzové pirohy are topped with škvarky, fried bacon bits. Prepare these by cutting good thick smoked bacon into pieces about inch long and frying them until the white fat part dissolves away. Top pierogi with few spoonfuls of grease and then with the bacon bits. Finally top with sour cream (kyslá smotana).
And there you have them, delicious Slovak homemade bryndzové pirohy. Serve with a glass of žinčica, sour sheep milk which is bit similar to kefir.
aaaaaaah, love these, my mum has to make them everytime I go home – it’s my ‘welcome home’ treat 🙂 She makes them in the same way with a tiny difference – try to mix filling with a little bit of chopped dill. It’ll give it a very nice flavour 🙂
I make pierogi quite often but I’ve never heard of this kind of filling. Can I use something else instead of bryndza? It’s not easy to get in my region of Poland.
absolutely you can use any filling you like. One option is cabbage, another meat. You can also make sweet pirohy, filled with jam or fruit.
Thanks so much for posting this! I LOVE pirohy!But, I have a couple of questions about this recipe. 1) I’m assuming you must peel the potatoes before boiling them, yes? 2) Do you mix the bryndza with anything, or is it straight? Everytime I’ve used Bryndza, I either mix it with sour cream, such as Bryndzove Halusky, or mix it with cream cheese, paprika, and green onion for Bryndzova Natierka.
Hi Amanda. Here are the answers. 1) Nope, you can boil potatoes in their skin. This is how my grandma boils potatoes, and boiling potatoes in their skin will produce softer porridge. I am not sure how they were cooked for this recipe, since I got to the kitchen only after they were already mashed up. 2) We didn’t mix bryndza with anything, but you can add little mashed potatoes. This will give the filling a creamier texture. Anyway, I hope this helps. Thanks for stopping by!
I am so going to be making this soon!
hi there
happy to discover new food discoveries ! happy to have bumped into you r blog and if you like french food come and visit mine you are very welcome !! cheers Pierre
By the way, if you are looking for bryndza in the United States, you can get it from Slovak Czech Varieties or (I think) from JM Import.com
These sound awesome!!!! I’ll try these tomorrow.
I made these about an hour ago and wow! Anyone who can make beautiful pierogies I admire. Mine were the ugliest ones I’ve ever seen, but at least it didn’t effect the taste too much. For me, bryndza is too salty without mixing it with something, so I think next time I’ll mix it with some potatoes or cream cheese. Never the less, they were awesome! Thanks Lubos for posting this one!
Thanks Amanda! I am glad you enjoyed the pierogi. About bryndza being too salty, I think this may have to do with the kind you buy. I don’t particularly like salty foods myself, and I don’t remember bryndza being all that salty. Perhaps if you buy “export-quality” bryndza, it may have some extra salt added so it keeps (just my hypothesis). But whatever works. What’s important is that it tastes good in the end. By the way, you can also fill pierogi with jam and top them with fried bread crumbs.
You can also use Liptauer Cheese which is also sheep milk cheese.
Thank you, Sarika – I will see about giving that a try!
My Lithuanian grandmother was taught to cook by her Slovak mother-in-law. She used a dry “farmen’s cheese” which was like a dry cottage cheese that came in a block. It was delicious!
Lubos, you are right, good original brynza is not salty, I remember hiking to salas in the mountain where we got real brynzu, oštiepky (sheep cheese), and drunk real fresh “žinčicu” (sour sheep milk)
I think you are right, to export they may have add some salt to it to preserve it. You can still buy not so salty “brynzu” in local stores in Slovakia
We have visited Slovakia on several occasions, and always have had pierogi at each of the family members homes, as well as in the restaurants around the country. The fillings range from mashed potato with cheese, prune and sauerkraut. Last year during the Easter Week, we had the pierogi at a restaurant filled with blueberries.
Ahoj Lubos,
Thanks for posting here my favourite dish “bryndzove pyrohy” 🙂
I’ve made it already at home but I was not satisfied with the result. It was just not like you get in a slovak restaurant. Plus during cooking some of them got open…
I think I am going to try it once again after seeing your recipe 🙂
Lubos, Thanks for the Bryndza Pierogi. Although I tried it without sour cream, it tastes good. I will pass the recipe to my international cook sister, she will love to make a Slovak dish. Where can she find the ingredients?
Thanks for coming, Sandra! 🙂 The filling is the imitation bryndza from Trader Joe’s (Israeli-style Feta, click the link for photo). One thing you can do with that Feta cheese is to mix it with butter and paprika to make a delicious spread: http://www.slovakcooking.com/2010/recipes/bryndza-spread/
Merry Christmas,
Thank you for this lovely recipe. I am teaching my children about Slovak foods, customs etc. to keep the “old country” a part of our lives. We will surely be making this dish asap! Can you recommend a proper beverage of Slovak origin to accompany this meal?
Thanks again!!
Plain kefir (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kefir). You can buy it any grocery store, next to yogurt or milk. It’s similar to what is typically drunk in Slovakia with pierogi or halušky. Or beer.
My Grandmother (from Ocova) made pirohy with prune filling smothered with buttered breadcrumbs. These were heavenly!! Buffalo, New York has a huge Pirohy Festival every summer. Unbelieveable the varieties of pirohy people come up with.
Hello
I have never made pirohi before. I’d like to give it a whirl.
I last ate the pirohy in the early 1960’s (maybe). My grandmother made them. My favorite was the prune filling. Can you tell me how ro prepare the prunes (ingredients added,etc).
If you can offer other tips……….that would be great.
Thank you,
Rick……..ancestors from Zamutov in Slovakia
Hey Rick, well the easiest way is to buy “plum butter” in your local Russian/German/European deli. But if you don’t have one around, you can make plum jam by buying prunes, blending them in a blender or a meat grinder, and cooking with sugar until you get something of the right consistency.
Here is an actual recipe, but it’s in Slovak: http://www.mimibazar.sk/recept.php?id=2022.
The recipe used 4kg (8.8 lbs) of plums, 800g (1.8 lbs) of sugar, and also 100ml (0.4 cups) of vinegar. I have no idea if the vinegar is added for taste or to keep the jam from spoiling – I have yet to try making jam myself. But I checked few other (English) recipes for canning plums and they all used just plums and sugar so it looks like it’s added for taste.
Rick,
This is off the beaten path but my relatives also came from Zamutov..I am wondering what their last names were. Mine were Czmar and Cmzar.
Bonnie panther7775@yahoo.com
If you want to prepare prune filling for pirohi this is my recipe.
Depends on how much. This quantity will probably fill about 12 pirohi.
Prepare your dough; roll out; cut out circles of dough. Evenly place the prune filling on each before folding and pinching. This way the filling will be used up completely.
1 1/2 cups prunes. Place in hot water and let come to boil. Continue to boil slowly for 5 minutes. Shut off and let cool in the liquid. Strain and try to press the excess water while still in strainer. At this point you may either use a food processor or potato masher. Add 2 tbsp. sugar and zest from 1 lemon (not the white pith). Mix well. Let cool completely and place the filling on the prepared dough (as above). Pinch and complete your way. Hope you like it.
My grandmother used whole pitted prunes in her pirohy. Farmer cheese was another filling, and rinsed sauerkraut. Never potato and cheese.
What is in the prune filling? thanks
Sherry
Actually only pitted prunes, water and sugar to taste. Boil for 5 minutes. Let sit until cooled. Drain and put them in processor until nearly smooth, but leave a little chunky. You can also grate some lemon zest into it.
That’s the only way my father ate them. My mom had to make them small – a one bite item.
ZDRAVIM SOM BACA ZO SLOVENSKA ZIJEM V KANADE UZ VYSE 20 ROKOV A VYRABAM VSETKY TRADICNE SALASNICKE SYRY BEZ KONZERVACNYCH LATOK AK HLADATE DOBRU OVCIU BRYNDZU ALEBO PRAVY OSTIEPOK CI KORBACIKY , PARENICKY BA AJ ZINCICU SKONTAKTUJTE MA POSIELAM PO KANADE AJ DO USA POSTOU
Hi…do you have a website or more information you could send me? We live in Calgary and would be interested in what you have to offer. We are from Topolcany originally. Thanks!
same here.
Dusan, ak mozes (mozno cez Lubosa) zverejnit ako sa s tebou skontaktovat a kolko tvoje vyrobky stoja tak budes mat niekolko novych zakaznikov.
Hi Sasha, Dusan’s website can be accessed by clicking on his name. But in any case, it is http://www.fatra.ca/
Thank you!
Dobry den,
Ja zijem vo Vancouvery.Vyrabate a predavate este bryndzu a mliecne vyrobky?
Ahoj Dusan,
Mozem objednat bryndzu a ovci syr?
Prosim Ta posli informacie.
Dakujem, Jan
Where in USA I can buy bryndza ???
I oftened watched my Baba and my mother make delicious pierogies. Having recently visited Prague, Czechoslovakia, we were disappointed to find NO pierogies….everyone told us that pierogies were polish not Slovak. I disagree as mt grandparents were Czechs.
Judie, your grandparents were from Czech but it does not mean that they did not cook “out of Czech recipes book” It happens all the time. I have friends who are born Czechs/Slovaks but like to cook Thai cousine.
Once you are exposed to some food and you like it, you will probably try to make it and adjust to how you can cook. In that case nobody can tellif it is Thai or Czech recipe, and thus cooking evolves.
I would not be worried about it, indeed pierogy is more polish or eussian food, does nor mean than anybody else can not cook it. If it is not found in restaurants, that just means other folks do not go for it while you liked it a lot.
I hope you understand what I am trying to say, and no Czech was not much into brynza (sheep cheese) and thus recipes would not use much of it in cooking.
I’m so excited! My grandmother makes these! Delicious
Hi Lubos
My mother made pierogie many times and I rememer them and how to make them, however my mothers recipe says 1 cup of flour, 1 egg, 1/4 tsp salt and 4 table spoons of cold water. What do you think of that recipe? It did not take a long time to make. Then I just boiled them till they came to the top. The trick is not to make them to thin or to thick. My favorite fulling is mash potato with cottage cheese.
I make them quite often for my customers. The dough I use is 3 cups flour, 1 tsp. salt, 1 cup sour cream and 2 eggs. The most popular is Potato/Sharp Cheese and Sweet Cabbage (sauteed like for Halusky) and prune.
That recipe is what my grammie used for her noodles called “lumpy noodles”. Some cottage cheese added to the dough lightens it up a bit. My grammie did not leave us any of her recipes so we’re flying by the seat of our pants, but I do know her Slovak mother-in-law taught her to cook. My grammie was Lithuanian.
Lubos thank you for the recipe. I made this dish last week and it was AMAZING!
http://lacucinadicrista.blogspot.it/2013/02/bryndzove-pirohy.html
Thanks for sharing, Cristina! They look great.
Hello, Lubos! My brother swears up and down that our grandma used to make pirohy with kapusta and potato filling, and says he’s searched for them in a few Polish deli’s and can’t find them anywhere – so I’ve opted to try to make them for him. I have a recipe for potato pirohy, so would it be a big diversion from the recipe to simply add the kapusta to the potato mixture? Anything I should know? Thank you, and keep up the good work!
When I make pagach I mix the sauteed cabbage and potatoes together for the filling.
The dough for the pirohy is nearly identical to the one that my wife uses for halusky, as taught to her by her grandmother, who was from Zakarovce and emigrated to Montana shortly after ww1. I love the idea of using this versatile recipe for pirohy as well! I am unable to get bryndza cheese, but will see about finding a good substitute. Thank you, Lubos, for sharing this.
I am happy to see all of your comments on Pirohy! My grandmother was from Slovakia, and my heritage is mixed between Czech, Slovak, and Polish, and I am also from the very Eastern European Cleveland area, but relocated to Portland, Oregon, so I am very very familiar with Pirohy–However, nobody has heard of them in Portland! Nonetheless, one filling nobody has mentioned that I grew up with (and quite tasty–my favorite)is Chopped Mushrooms sauteed with Onion, Bacon, Fresh Dill and a little Garlic and Paprika! If you are from this part of the world, you love Mushrooms. Grandma and all my Great-Aunts used to go Mushroom-Hunting in the late summer and Autumn every year, even here in America!
I am just finding this site. My gosh this looks good. I adore pierogies. So a “real” Czech pirohy…wow. I believe my heritage is Czech. Census records differ from year to year, some say Czech some say Hungarian. Anyway, thanks for this site!!
Hi Tara, and I thought you are of Viking origin … just kidding 🙂
I happened to be poking around online to do a project for a college course. I am part Slovak as my great grandmother came to America from Slovakia. My family loves pirohy. Even my Southern American husband loves them! I don’t really use the recipe above. My family uses equal measurements of the flour and eggs, usually 3 cups of flour and 3 eggs, and adding water slowly and very little at a time. We do mix the dough by hand, but use a mixer to mash potatoes so they are smooth and creamy. We also fill half with lekvar(we use prunes from the baby food isle). They are amazing and delicious. We let them boil for about 3 minutes and smother them in butter or margarine as soon as they come out from the water.
Your recipe sounds like mine which was handed down from mom and grandma (Slovak and Ukrainian). Our favorites are mashed potato with cheddar and sauerkraut. I allow mine to boil for 5-6 minutes after they come to the top. Otherwise they can be a little tough.
both my parents were from slovakia so we had wonderful food all the time My favorite pirohy were the lekvar {prune| ones. As soon as they came out of the pot we poured melted butter over them and ground poppyseed. Couldn’t get enough of this wonderful stuff..Now i can’t find enough poppyseed at a reasonable price ..
a
My Slovakian grandmother taught me piroghi making using sauerkraut. She also used lekvar (prune filling)
The lekvar was prepared by placing prune plums in a 200 degree oven for several hours until very soft. remove pits and puree. Unfortunately I have been unable to locate any prune plums. I may try regular plums to see if they work.
I married into a Ukranian family; Their piroghis were stuffed with mashed potatoes and american ceese. served sauteed in butter and onions; topped with sauer cream withkielbasa on the side.
Hi. Prune plums come to supermarkets in Sept…of this I am sure, as I also have a tree in my front yard. :-). Your best bet is to get (unflavored) prunes, put in food processor with a bit of sugar. Blend. Good for when fresh isn’t in season. (Good anyway)
Hey
Awesome share.!!!!!!!!
Really amazing article.
I have been searching for such an informative post for many days and it seems my search just ended here. Good work. Keep posting.
Thank you for sharing this and looking forward to learning more from this blog.It’s helped me a lot
Kavach
whenever me and my family visit my family in Czech than my grandma makes piroshki and it tastes exactly the same! it reminds me of my true home.