June 24, 2016 9:00 am
This is Mum’s borscht, which I grew up eating – she got the recipe from a Ukrainian neighbour who lived on our street.
I had a strong childhood aversion to beets. I didn’t like the sweetness of them, and remember hating how beet juice would seep into everything else on your plate.
Maybe that’s why I never minded borscht. For one thing, it was sour. Plus the seeping was a done deed, and everything stained a consistent shade of purply red.
Mum would sometimes add chunks of summer sausage to her borscht – I don’t, as I find it detracts from the taste.
Posted by Andrea
Categories: Euro 2016 food, Fern's Food, Russia, Soup
Tags: beets, cabbage, carrots, dairy-free, dill, gluten-free, onions, vegan, vegetarian
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Oh, Andrea, your last few blog posts that I missed are like music to my ears.. So nostalgic and inspirational. I must cook authentic home food more often. Everything what you cook looks just spot on!! 🙂
By Yana on June 30, 2016 at 9:05 pm
I really appreciate you saying that, Yana. There is a fair amount of Ukrainian influence on what we consider “Canadian cooking”. I’ve grown up eating some of these dishes, but aside from borscht, haven’t cooked them myself. It’s been fun to delve into the world of Eastern European cooking.
By Andrea on June 30, 2016 at 9:10 pm
It always makes me happy when people not only trying some of EE food, but even cooking it!
By Yana on June 30, 2016 at 10:09 pm
I hadn’t noticed how many EE teams had qualified when I decided to do this. Was a little daunted as not food I’ve cooked much before, but have really enjoyed it!
By Andrea on June 30, 2016 at 10:13 pm