Find the cabbage dish of your dreams in Ukrainian cuisine

Olia Hercules goes beyond borscht and showcases the diversity of Ukrainian food in her new cookbook – dreamy cabbage dish included.

Olia Hercules' friend has dreams about this cabbage dish, because it's so good.

Olia Hercules' friend has dreams about this cabbage dish, because it's so good. Source: Joe Woodhouse

There comes a time when a country breaks free from its culinary stereotypes, or simply starts to embrace them. Since the publication of her first cookbook five years ago, has been reframing our views of the food from her homeland of Ukraine – the .

The London-based chef and food writer – who has just released her third cookbook, is originally from a town called , in Ukraine's south. Here, Hercules grew up with a – a sanctuary for food preparation and a space to curb the summer heat. Through this space – a commonality across the country – she reveals the richness and breadth of Ukraine’s regions, cultures, climates, seasons and seven borders. While borscht is “quintessentially a very Ukrainian dish because of its regionality” Hercules says, there is also so much more.

“It really helps thinking of it like we do about Italian food – earthy and rich up north, Ukrainians too make polenta and use lots of mushrooms … and [people] grow amazing tomatoes and aubergines (eggplant) in the south.” But it’s the way this bounty is used that is equally surprising.
Olia Hercules champions the diversity of Ukrainian food in her new book.
Olia Hercules champions the diversity of Ukrainian food in her new book. Source: Joe Woodhouse
Lyok, a garlic and herb paste normally used as a base in broths, is repurposed in a zucchini recipe as a dressing. Soft tarragon, dill and parsley with woody thyme result in a “flavour unlike any I have ever experienced”, she says.

Fermentation and pickling, an ancient Ukrainian practice, is placed front and centre in . “It is so central to summer kitchens, that’s one of their main functions to have this space to do all of your … pickling and preserving … and also to have a kind of special workshop to do it.”

An extraordinary example of fermentation is in central Ukraine where whole apples are fermented in a pumpkin purée. “The result is so beautiful, [it] almost tastes of summer berries and some of the apple flavour goes into the pumpkin purée and vice versa.”
It really helps thinking of it like we do about Italian food - earthy and rich up north, Ukrainians too make polenta and use lots of mushrooms … and [people] grow amazing tomatoes and aubergines (eggplant) in the south.
Pickles are also used in cooking. Hercules highly recommends the fermented Gagauz stuffed peppers. Whole peppers are hollowed out and stuffed with cabbage and carrot, then placed in brine with chillies and tomatoes. The result, she believes, are the most delicious fermented pickles in the world.
In at the tip of Ukraine’s west bordering Romania, Slovakia and Hungary, paprika is a key ingredient. The book's recipe for Sashko’s bogracz stew includes three types of meat, “all tinged with this really superb paprika, some sweet, some spicy”, the author says. Whole vegetables are placed into it, “so in the end you … get this whole onion … saturated in these paprika juices”.

Fruits, berries, pastes, poppy seeds, nuts and curd cheeses feature in the book's Ukrainian desserts. Potato-dough dumplings for example, are filled with ripe plums at the peak of the season and served with crème fraîche or honey, and steamed bilberry doughnuts are dipped in butter and then rolled in crushed nuts and sugar.
Olia Hercules' third cookbook draws on the richness and breadth of Ukraine’s regions.
Olia Hercules' third cookbook draws on the richness and breadth of Ukraine’s regions. Source: Olia Hercules
Despite the incredible diversity and lure of lesser-known dishes, borscht and its accomplices persist in Ukraine for a reason. “For a long time I had a real, deep-rooted complex about Ukraine’s cabbage and potato dishes … but now I embrace them all – none more so than a delicious braised cabbage.”

Hercules shares her mother’s recipe, “a pretty common one” apparently, but extraordinary enough to capture the attention of Hercules' friend Sean who wrote: “I cannot convey how much I loved the cabbage last night, so amazing. It goes so far to disprove the stereotype. I had dreams about it.”

The resulting recipe, , almost presents like a one-pot pasta dish: tagliatelle-sized strips of cabbage are hand-massaged with salt, cooked with onions and caraway seeds then stirred through with red capsicum followed by gently warmed tomato juice with crème fraîche.

is an extensive tribute to Hercules' love of her homeland and the undeniable comfort its food provokes – whether through, or beyond, its stereotypes.

 

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4 min read
Published 12 August 2020 11:25am
Updated 12 August 2020 11:36am
By Jennifer Curcio


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