How to Make Potato-Cheddar Pierogi at Home



Test cook Bryan Roof teaches host Julia Collin Davison the secrets to tackling authentic Pittsburg-style Potato-Cheddar Pierogi at home.

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40 Comments

  1. AP flour is just fine, trust me. Of course that depends on your location. In our area our AP flour has a high protein content. I have never my life used "bread flour" for any bread OR vereniki dough. There are many dough recipes but honestly you can make vereniki dough with just flour and water. It's all in how you handle the dough to make sure it is not tough.
    I use boiling water when mixing the dough up. Then knead and then allow to rest for a while. It will roll out easily. Just do not let the dough dry out and do not add more flour.
    Oh ya, they freeze very well. And you can fill with anything. My bube used to make kasha, potato and onion, potato and cheese, cherry, blueberry fillings. I like potato with onions the best.

  2. I grew up in a polish / German neighborhood. Pierogies were a favorite of mine as a kid. I made you recipe and I will tell you, this brought the wonderful memories flooding back. Great recipe and presentation. Thanks!

    Joe

  3. My family can vouch for me that I created(and should have patented and copyrighted) the term Pierogi Purgatory 40 years ago, frustrated at the insistence of my mother that I make them in the EXACTING(and seemingly never successful) way she made them(and her Bohemian mother in law and hers and hers ad infinitum through the past centuries…) I even post a Christmas pierogi rant every year on Facebook. Thanks for the relatively easy recipe, CC. The best kind , naturally, are one's grandmothers…always.

  4. I'm from Poland and i've never seen a correct recipe for traditional pierogi on english youtube. They all make a dough more complicated then cake while you literally just need hot water and flour. that's it jsut 2 ingredients.

  5. My mother's father was from Poland and immigrated to Saskatchewan. Needless to say, I grew up making and feasting on pierogies. The potato and cheddar cheese was a family favorite. But we included some bacon bits and diced onion in the filling. BTW, IF there are leftovers, pierogies are amazing fried the next morning for breakfast.

  6. These are PITTSBURGH comfort food. I come from an ITALIAN AMERICAN FAMILY from Pittsburgh, yet had Pierogies with Sunday dinner more often than not. Theyre great on cold days.. us kids called them belly busters..

  7. I am Slovak and this is similar to how I make my Pirohies. I've never tried the bread dough and am going to. Thank you. I went to the website to retrieve the recipe and it wouldn't let me view it. Fortunately I wrote everything down as I watched.

  8. In my experience, people would brown the pierogis in a nonstick pan in a little olive oil. Don't cook too long. But it should be visibly brown. Then you simply pour the onions on top … along with some sour cream (some use homemade apple sauce but we always stuck to the sour cream).

  9. I learned about perogies when I lived in Pa. but I fried them from store bought. I used your boiled recipie and they were perfect, tender and delicious. I made mine larger and got 20 out of the recipie and used a fork to close them so I got no angels. I froze the rest since I am the only one eating them for a later date. Thanks for the recipie.

  10. Hot potatoes, cheese and butter in a food processor = gum. This might be ok in a pieorgi. I'm trying this in a small batch but as a 2nd gen Pollack from PA coal country (eastern) all was done by hand from Babci on down. No need to "chill" potatoes — you do those first and they should be at temp by time your dough is ready for stuffing.

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