Every Ukrainian family has a modification; with beans, without cabbage, etc. They are all valid though, there’s no unified ‘correct’ recipe. The one you are about to read and cook is borscht with pork ribs. You’ll appreciate its taste and flavor. You’ll connect and feel a true Ukrainian soul while savoring!
Recipe category
Preparation time
30 minutes
Cooking time
60 minutes
Number of servings
8
Difficulty
Medium
Ingredients
400-500g pork ribs
2 beets
2 tomatoes
¼ celery root
¼ cabbage
3-4 medium potatoes
1 carrot
1 onion
1-2 smoked pears
2 bay leaves
3 allspice berries
1 bulb garlic
1 bell pepper
200ml tomato juice
30g butter
2 tbsp tomato paste
3l water
Sour cream
1 can beans (optional)
Salt to taste
Recipe instruction
- Preheat the oven to 400°F/200°C. Put pork ribs on the baking dish and bake them for 30 minutes. Wash but don’t peel the celery root. Dice the carrot.
- Put the baked pork ribs in a pot and add 3 liters of water. Chop the celery root and carrot and add them to the pot, along with half the unpeeled onion. Bring the pot to the boil and simmer for 30 minutes.
- The heart of the borscht is sautéed vegetables. Dice the bell pepper, tomatoes, and remainder of the onion. Place the butter in a saucepan and add the vegetables. Cook them over a moderate heat until soft. Add the tomato paste, reduce the heat, and simmer for 5-7 minutes. Grate a beet, add it to the saucepan, and stew for a further 3-4 minutes.
- Cut a garlic bulb in a half and add it to the pot. Shred the cabbage and put it aside.
- Take the second beet and squeeze all the juice out. If you don’t have a juice squeezer, you can grate a beet and pass it through the sieve. Add the juice together with the allspice, bay leaves, and several pinches of salt to taste.
- Optionally add the canned beans.
- Add the smoked pears to the pot. They will make your dish smell smoky.
- Add the shredded cabbage and cook for a further 5 minutes.
- Take the borscht off the heat and let it stand for 30 minutes.
Serve the borscht with a spoon of sour cream and chopped dill. Put the leftover borscht in the fridge, and remember that it tastes better the next day!