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Back to Good Food

Good Food

Ask Evan: How Do I Make Grandma’s Kasha?

Every Tuesday I answer a question from a Good Food listener.  You can email me a question, leave one on Facebook or add one in the comments section here.  Today’s question is…

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By Evan Kleiman • Feb 8, 2011 • 1 min read

Every Tuesday I answer a question from a Good Food listener. You can

email me a question, leave one on

Facebook or add one in the comments section here. Today’s question is from Ellen:

I want to make KASHA just like Grandma. Grandma’s not with us anymore, so I can’t ask what her special spin was on this comforting dish! Grandma’s kasha was soft on the inside and crispy on the outside. She never mixed it with varnishkas (bowtie noodles). It had a beefy and oniony flavor. Mmmmmmmmm!

Kasha like Grandma made is a very tasty dish if your Bubbe was a good cook. Kasha is buckwheat groats, that are mixed with an egg, pan toasted then steamed with onions and broth like a pilaf. If you leave out the beaten egg or the toasting you lose; you get gummy, stuck together and bland tasting grain. If done correctly you get individual, nutty, addicting buckwheat groat (I love that word) pilaf. Also, anything Jewish tasting needs plenty of onion and some fat. Freshly rendered chicken fat is best, butter is equally tasty but not kosher if you’re serving the pilaf with meat. (Keep reading for my cooking method.)

I often make double this quantity to keep in the fridge and add to salads. Here are some more recipe ideas from Epicurious and the NY Times’ Mark Bittman.

  • https://images.ctfassets.net/2658fe8gbo8o/AvYox6VuEgcxpd20Xo9d3/769bca4fbf97bf022190f4813812c1e2/new-default.jpg?h=250

    Evan Kleiman

    host 'Good Food'

    CultureRecipesFood & Drink
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