Polish Easter is a time of great celebration and joy, and no feast would be complete without a steaming bowl of white borscht. This traditional soup, known as bialy barszcz, is a labor of love that takes hours to prepare, but the results are well worth the effort. The soup is made with a variety of ingredients, including beets, horseradish, and hard-boiled eggs, and is served with small dumplings called uszka. White borscht is a delicious and festive dish that is sure to please everyone at your Easter table.
Here are our top 7 tried and tested recipes!
POLISH WHITE BORSCHT ON PORK RIBS AND FERMENTED WHEAT STARTER
This Polish White Borscht delivers everything you want in a warm Easter soup. It's a velvety, meaty stock laced with root veggies, horseradish, marjoram, and chunks of tender white kiełbasa sausage.
Provided by Polonist
Categories Polish Soups
Time P5DT2h10m
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- Grab a large cooking pot, 4-5 quart / litres should be enough. Place just over a pound (around 500 grams) of pork ribs inside.
- Pour in just over 2 quarts (2 litres) of cold water. Bring to boil, then reduce the heat to low-medium. Cover with a lid and cook for 30 minutes.
- While that's cooking, peel the vegetables: 2 carrots, 2 parsley roots, a piece of celery root. Chop into chunky pieces.
- Grab a leek, remove the dirty outer leaves.
- Wash all the veggies under the running water and set them aside.
- Once the 30 minutes are up, add chopped vegetables to the pot. Add the spices: 3 all-spice berries, 2 bay leaves, 5 black peppercorns.
- Bring the pot to boil, reduce the heat to low and cook undercover for another hour.
- After that time, peel a garlic clove and smash it with a side of a knife. Add to the pot.
- Add 1 teaspoon of salt and 2 tablespoons of grated horseradish. This can be from a jar or freshly grated - whatever you have available.
- Cook for another 5 minutes or so. Grab another pot and place a strainer over it. Pour our soup through it. Don't throw the veggies and meat away! Keep them on the side for now.
- Grab a piece of smoked bacon. If it has a tough skin, cut it off. Cut the meat into cubes, roughly quarter of an inch (5-6 mm) in size.
- Heat up 1 teaspoon of canola oil and 1 teaspoon of butter. Add chopped bacon. Fry for 5-7 minutes, until the meat cubes turn lightly golden. Add it to the soup.
- Grab 4 white kiełbasa links, poke them with a toothpick in a few places. Add them to the pot and cook on low heat for 20 minutes.
- Add 1⅓ cup (300ml) of sour wheat starter for a milder Barszcz, up to 2 cups (or more; roughly 500ml) for a sharper result. If you're not sure how much to add, pour it over gradually, tasting along the way. There are two ways to do it: • Mix the contents of the jar/bottle, so that the liquid part blends with the floury part, • Or start by adding the liquid only, topping with the muddy floury part later on - spoonful by spoonful, until you reach the desired thickness. That's how I do it.
- Add 2 teaspoons of dried marjoram and bring to a boil. Cook for a few minutes, stirring continuously. Have a taste - does it need some seasoning? If so, add a pinch of salt and pepper.
- Pour the sour cream into a cup. Gradually add some hot soup in (around 8 tablespoons in total), spoonful by spoonful, stirring as you go. Pour over this creamy mixture into the soup, mix it in with a spoon.
- Do you want to serve your soup with vegetables and meat? Chop some veggies into pieces. Remove the meat from the bone. Add them to the soup. Cook for another 2-3 minutes on a low heat.
- Peel the boiled eggs, slice them in half.
- To serve, pour the soup over into bowls or soup plates. Distribute the pieces of meat and vegetables evenly. Add a portion of sausage to each plate - whole links or slices, up to you.
- Decorate with halved boiled eggs and fresh marjoram.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 522 calories, Carbohydrate 52 grams carbohydrates, Cholesterol 148 milligrams cholesterol, Fat 26 grams fat, Fiber 6 grams fiber, Protein 20 grams protein, SaturatedFat 9 grams saturated fat, ServingSize 1, Sodium 1021 grams sodium, Sugar 7 grams sugar, TransFat 0 grams trans fat, UnsaturatedFat 13 grams unsaturated fat
POLISH WHITE BORSCHT (BIALY BARSZCZ)
White Borscht is a tasty Polish Easter soup that is full of ingredients carrying religious symbolism.
Provided by Sarah | Curious Cuisiniere
Categories Dinner Recipes
Time 1h5m
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Bring keilbassa and water to a boil in a large dutch oven or heavy bottomed soup pot. Reduce heat slightly and boil for 25 minutes. Remove keilbassa to a plate and set aside. Leave the broth in the dutch oven.
- In a medium, non-stick skillet, saute garlic and onion with a tsp of butter until soft, 5 min.
- Add onion mixture to kielbassa broth. Add diced potatoes, bay, salt, and pepper. Cook until potatoes are tender, 15-20 min.
- In a small bowl, whisk flour and sour cream together until smooth. Add ½ c of the soup broth to the sour cream mixture and whisk until smooth and thin. Pour mixture into the soup, stirring constantly. Simmer, stirring often, until thickened, 10 min.
- Cut the kielbasas into 1/2 inch slices, chop the hard boiled eggs. Add both to the soup. Taste the soup and adjust the salt an pepper as desired. Cook 1-2 minutes to heat through.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 460 calories, ServingSize 2 cups
WHITE BORSCHT (BARSZCZ BIAłY - POLISH EASTER SOUP)
White borscht or barszcz biały in Polish is an amazing Polish soup made with Polish white sausage, smoked bacon, and sour liquid made from fermented wheat flour. I may sound weird, but I can assure you, this soup is so delicious! It may be unusual to a foreign palate at first, but I can assure you, you will love it more and more with each bite (or spoon). The soup is meaty, smokey, thick, creamy, and delightfully sour. It's traditionally eaten at Easter but is also popular during other parts of the year. It's served with hard-boiled eggs.
Provided by Aleksandra
Categories Main Course
Time 45m
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Cook the white sausage: Bring the broth to a boil, when hot add the raw white sausages and simmer over very low heat for 15-20 minutes. The broth should not cook rapidly, it should just gently simmer.
- Chop the smoked bacon into 1/2-inch (1 cm) cubes, press the garlic through a garlic press. Peel the potatoes and cut them into small cubes.
- When the sausage is cooked, take it out of the water and cut into slices.
- Add potatoes to the broth and cook for 7-10 minutes or until the potatoes are soft.
- Heat the oil in a large frying pan. When hot, add the sausage slices and bacon. Cook for a couple of minutes over medium-high heat, until they are browned on all sides. Add the garlic and marjoram and cook for 30 seconds.
- Add some hot broth to the pan then scrape with a spatula all the brown bits on the bottom of the pan. Add the content of the pan to the pot with broth.
- Add the sour wheat starter - stir the flour with the liquid and add it to the soup. Make sure to add the starter gradually - trying the soup while you add it, to make sure it's not too sour for you.
- Add the heavy cream and horseradish. Warm up the soup until very warm (I'm trying not to boil it only to preserve the health benefits of the wheat starter).
- Season the soup with salt and pepper. Serve with hard-boiled eggs.
- Enjoy!
Nutrition Facts : Calories 518 kcal, ServingSize 1 serving
POLISH WHITE BORSCHT (BIALY BARSZCZ)
This recipe contains no beets, but for some reason is still called borscht. It does contain kielbasa, hard cooked eggs, and potatoes! Adapted from Sarah Karnasiewicz, Los Angeles Times.
Provided by threeovens
Categories Polish
Time 20m
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Place the kielbasa and eggs (still in their shells, they are going to be hard-cooked) into a 4-quart pot and cover with the water and bring to a boil over high heat; reduce heat, cover, and simmer gently for 8 minutes.
- Use a slotted spoon, to remove eggs to an ice water bath; continue simmering the kielbasa for 15 minutes more.
- Drain kielbasa, reserving the cooking liquid separately.
- Return the pot to the heat melt the butter; turn the heat up to medium and stir in the garlic and leeks and cook until softened, about 5 minutes.
- Reduce heat and cook until leeks are very tender, about 20 minutes, being careful not to let the leeks brown.
- Stir in the potatoes and reserved cooking liquid, increase heat to a simmer, cover, and continue cooking until potatoes are tender, 25 to 30 minutes.
- Puree the soup using an immersion blender, or in a standing blender, in batches; return soup to medium-low heat.
- In a small bowl, whisk together the flour and sour cream; stir in 1/2 cup of the soup to temper the mixture, then whisk into the soup in the pot on the stove.
- Slice the kielbasa into 1/2-inch slices and stir into soup; stir in horseradish and season with salt and pepper.
- Thin soup with water if needed.
- Peel the eggs and roughly chop them as a garnish for the soup.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 285.9, Fat 20, SaturatedFat 8.8, Cholesterol 152.2, Sodium 774.9, Carbohydrate 14.8, Fiber 1.2, Sugar 2.9, Protein 12.3
BIALY BARSZCZ RECIPE - (4.5/5)
Provided by garciamoss
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Boil kielbasa and 8 cups water in a 6-qt. saucepan. Reduce heat to medium-low; cook to flavor broth, about 25 minutes. Pour liquid and kielbasa into a bowl; reserve. Return saucepan to medium heat. Add butter, garlic, leeks, and onion; cook until soft, about 10 minutes. Add reserved liquid, potatoes, marjoram, and bay leaf; boil. Reduce heat to medium-low; cook until potatoes are tender, about 30 minutes. Discard marjoram and bay leaf; purée soup in a blender. Return soup to pot; bring to a simmer. Meanwhile, whisk sour cream and flour in a bowl, add ½ cup soup, and whisk until smooth. Pour mixture into soup; cook, stirring, until thickened, about 5 minutes. Cut kielbasa into ½″-thick slices; add to soup along with horseradish, salt, and pepper. Garnish with dill, parsley, and eggs.
WHITE BORSCHT
This white borscht, a nod to the tradition of sour soups in Ukrainian cooking, is simply a perfect meal: rich and satisfying, yet bright and delicate and clean all at once. It's given its distinct tang up front, by soaking a hunk of sourdough bread in the simmering broth, and also at the end, by whisking in a little crème fraîche before serving. At the center is the delicious, subtle, complex broth. The better the kielbasa, the better the broth, obviously, and it's worth using the whole garland for that complex smoky seasoning it imparts. There'll be extra for snacking. The chopped dill keeps it all bright and fresh and lively in the mouth. A year-round classic to have in your repertoire, it's especially beloved in colder months. When weather forecasters announce a dismal spell of sleeting days in a row, you'll think, oh, good! White borscht weather!
Provided by Gabrielle Hamilton
Categories dinner, lunch, sausages, soups and stews, appetizer, main course, side dish
Time 1h30m
Yield 5 quarts
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- Cut kielbasa into 4 equal lengths, and cover in a pot with 3 quarts cold water and the bay leaves. Bring to a boil, then let gently boil for 25 minutes more until swollen and cooked through and beads of oil have formed. Pull sausages from the now smoky and seasoned water, and set aside. Save that water!
- While the kielbasa simmers, split leeks in half lengthwise, then soak and rinse in cold water to thoroughly remove all sand. Slice leeks into 3/8-inch half-moons from whites to dark greens, as far up as is viable.
- Peel potatoes, trim all four sides to stabilize on the cutting board and trim both ends to "box" the potato. Save the scraps. Cut the boxes into large cubes, about 3/4-inch square.
- In a sturdy soup pot, melt 1 stick butter over low heat until foaming. Stir in onion, garlic and a healthy pinch of salt, and let them sweat for a full 5 minutes until translucent.
- Stir in remaining butter, the sliced leeks and another generous pinch of salt, then let sweat slowly over low heat for 8 minutes until moist, bright green and glossy.
- Add potato scraps, the cube of bread and half the kielbasa boiling liquid. Let gently simmer 10 minutes while the potato scrap softens and the bread hunk becomes flabby and swollen. If you need to increase the heat to get a little simmer going, do so.
- Meanwhile, slice kielbasa in half lengthwise. Place two pieces back into the soup pot as is, and then slice the remaining 6 pieces into very thin, 1/8-inch half-moons, and set aside.
- Retrieve the soggy lump of sourdough bread with a slotted spoon, and don't worry if you also get a few bits of leek or onion or whatever is floating in the soup when you pull it out. Also remove about 1 cup of liquid, and set aside.
- Add potato cubes and the rest of the kielbasa liquid to the pot. Add another pinch of salt and half the black pepper. Let it come back to temperature, and then to simmer until potatoes are cooked through, about 25 minutes more.
- Using either a stick blender or a traditional blender, purée the sodden hunk of bread until foamy, using some of the liquid you pulled in Step 8, if needed. Stir this back into the soup pot once the potatoes are cooked through, and add the sliced kielbasa as well.
- Whisk the crème fraîche with 1/2 cup of the hot reserved liquid; stir mixture into the soup. Stir in the chopped dill and the remaining 1/2 tablespoon pepper. Serve very hot.
EASTER WHITE BORSCHT
Trying to recreate childhood memory of old Polish dish. Everyone does it differently. This was my first attempt. Garnish with fresh dill sprigs.
Provided by Jeff Popple
Categories Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes Soup Recipes Vegetable Soup Recipes Borscht
Time 1h5m
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 14
Steps:
- Bring water, kielbasa, and 2 whole cloves garlic to boil in a large pot; reduce heat to medium and simmer for 30 minutes. Remove sausage and pour liquid into a separate bowl. Cut sausage into cubes.
- Melt butter over medium heat in the pot used to boil sausage; cook and stir leeks, onion, and minced garlic until vegetables are tender, about 5 minutes. Transfer vegetables to a blender; add about 1/2 cup reserved sausage water and blend until smooth, adding more water as needed.
- Pour vegetable puree and remaining sausage water back into the original pot. Add bay leaves and bring borscht to a simmer over medium heat; remove and discard leaves. Whisk sour cream and flour in a bowl until smooth; gradually whisk into borscht until thickened. Stir dill and vinegar into soup and season with salt and black pepper.
- Divide cubed sausage and chopped eggs into bowls; ladle borscht over sausage and egg.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 732 calories, Carbohydrate 15 g, Cholesterol 248.8 mg, Fat 62.6 g, Fiber 0.8 g, Protein 26.4 g, SaturatedFat 24.9 g, Sodium 1637.6 mg, Sugar 4.6 g
Tips and Conclusion on White Borscht Polish Easter Soup (Bialy Barszcz)
--- ###Tips:
- **Use high-quality ingredients.** Fresh, flavorful ingredients will make the best white borscht. Choose firm, crisp vegetables and herbs. Use a good-quality broth or stock for the soup base. - **Don't crowd the pan.** When cooking the vegetables, make sure to give them enough space so that they can brown properly. If you crowd the pan, the vegetables will steam instead of brown. - **Season the soup to taste.** White borscht should be slightly acidic, with a hint of sweetness and a touch of heat. Adjust the seasonings to your liking. - **Serve with traditional accompaniments.** White borscht is traditionally served with hard-boiled eggs, sausage, and fresh herbs. You can also serve it with a dollop of sour cream or yogurt. ###Conclusion:
White borscht is a delicious and traditional Polish Easter soup. It is a light and flavorful soup that is perfect for a spring or summer meal. The soup is made with a variety of vegetables, including cabbage, carrots, potatoes, and leeks. It is also flavored with dill, parsley, and bay leaves. White borscht is a hearty and satisfying soup that is sure to please everyone at the table.
In addition to its delicious flavor, white borscht is also a healthy soup. It is low in calories and fat, and it is a good source of vitamins and minerals. The vegetables in the soup provide a variety of nutrients, including fiber, vitamins A and C, and potassium. White borscht is a great way to get your daily dose of fruits and vegetables.
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