Kash Varnishkes
Submitted by nicki29
Kasha varnishkes is the classic Jewish comfort dish: toasted buckwheat groats coated with egg, simmered with caramelized onions and porcini mushrooms, then tossed with bowtie pasta.
YIELD
4 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
35 minREADY
1 hrsOne of the most beloved dishes of Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, kasha varnishkes is a study in thrift and flavor. Toasted buckwheat groats (kasha) get tossed with a beaten egg, which coats each grain with protein and keeps them from clumping during cooking. A half-hour rest lets the egg dry and set, a step most home cooks skip and live to regret.
Caramelizing the onions in schmaltz (or goose fat here) with a pinch of sugar is the flavor foundation. Skipping the goose fat for vegetable oil works but loses that traditional rich, savory depth. Dried porcini mushrooms rehydrated in warm water add deep umami that fresh mushrooms alone can’t match.
Bowtie pasta (the “varnishkes” part of the name) gives textural contrast to the tender grain. The result is deeply savory, hearty, and utterly satisfying cold-weather food.
Kitchen Tips
- Don’t skip the 30-minute dry for the egg-coated kasha. Wet grains steam together into porridge instead of staying separate.
- Caramelize the onions slowly. Rushed onions means pale kasha with no sweet depth.
- Save the porcini soaking liquid and strain through cheesecloth. Add it to the broth for even more flavor.
- Use a tight-fitting lid for the final simmer. Steam escape leaves the kasha undercooked and the grains tough.
Variations
- Use schmaltz (rendered chicken fat) in place of goose fat for the most traditional Ashkenazi flavor.
- Skip the meat fats entirely and use olive oil with vegetable stock for a vegetarian version.
- Add a handful of fresh dill or parsley at the end for brightness against all that savory richness.
Ingredients
Directions
Soak porcini mushrooms in small amount of warm water.
When they’re soft, cut mushrooms into small pieces and set aside.
Stir together kasha and egg with fork and set aside to dry 30 minutes, stirring occasionally.
Melt ¼ cup goose fat in large skillet (preferably broiler-proof) with tight fitting lid.
Add onions along with sugar and sauté, stirring often, until well-browned.
Add mushrooms and garlic. Cover and cook until mushrooms yield their liquid.
Continue cooking uncovered until liquid evaporates.
Add kasha mixture, salt, pepper, and oregano and cook, stirring constantly, 2 or 3 minutes.
Stir in broth and porcini mushrooms. Cover tightly and simmer 20 minutes or until liquid is absorbed.
Meanwhile, cook bowties according to package directions.
Mix in noodles.
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