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Personal ads with photos: Yulia , one of Russia woman from Moscow
Yulia
ID: 1116054
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Character:
Womanly Woman-tender, sexy, smart.With a smile to ligten up your day!
Interests:
I love reading, dancing(even at home:-)for my man, cooking(especially soups)
Looking For Type:
Eager to love and be loved, kind, polite.The one who want family and child(children)
Looking For Age:
35 - 50
Russian cuisine is famous for exotic soups, cabbage shchi and solyanka, which is made of assorted meats. Russians are great lovers of pelmeni, small Siberian meat pies boiled in broth. Every housewife of any experience has her own recipes for pies, pickles, and sauerkraut. Even more varied is the choice of recipes for mushrooms, fried, pickled, salted, boiled and what not. Rich nature let Russian women create plenty of splendid dishes famous for the excellent gustatory senses and beauty.
Borstch
The Russians have a soup meal at least once a day. Schi, borsch, rassolnik, botvinia, ukha, okroshka and solianka has been a peculiarity of Russia since ancient times. Soups can be made on meat, fish, mushroom, vegetables or milk stocks.
How about a plate of Russian borstch? Nothing can warm your heart and stomach better than this traditional soup meal.
Ask Anastasia Web Yulia to make it for you!
Ingredients:
3/1/2 c canned tomatoes
5 or 6 med. size potatoes cut in halves
1 large carrot cut fine
1 small peeled beet
black pepper & salt to taste
1 small onion chopped butter
4 c shredded cabbage
¾ c sweet cream
½ c fresh green pepper chopped
2 tb fresh or dried dill
1 celery chopped fine
2/1/2 qts water
1/1/2 c diced potatoes
Put water to boil in large kettle. Add 1/2 c canned tomatoes. Drop in boiling water 5 or 6 med. size potatoes, chopped carrot and the beet. Add 3 tb butter in frying pan. When melted add chopped onion, cook tender but do not brown. Add 3 c canned tomatoes and let simmer with onion and butter until a thick sauce. Into a separate frying pan put 2-3 tb butter to melt. Add 2 c shredded cabbage and fry. Cook tender but do not brown. Shred another 2 c to add later to the borstch. When potatoes are tender remove them to a bowl. Add 2 tb butter, mash well, then add ? c sweet cream and mix well and set aside.
Add 1/1/2 c diced potatoes to the stock and the remainder of the shredded cabbage. When diced potatoes are tender, add the onion-tomato-sauce, then add the cooked cabbage, and the potato-cream mixture. Add 3 tb butter to the borstch. Stir well.
Add fresh chopped fine green pepper. Add 3 tb fresh or dried dill. Remove beet, one hour later after borstch is ready.
Borstch is ready to serve. Serve with chopped garlic in your soup bowl and a fresh piece of bread and butter. Yummy, enjoy...
Pickles: Pickled cucumbers
Preserving vegetables and fruits is an ancient Russian tradition and is still very popular. Nothing can compare with home-made pickled mushrooms and cucumbers. And who never tried grandmother's gooseberry preserve has lost a truly delicious joy of life!
You can ask your Anastasia Web Yulia from Moscow to make some pickles for you! We are sure she has stored up some old grandmother's recipes.
Ingredients:
4,4 lb little cucumbers
2 tb vinegar 9%
2 tb sugar
100 g salt
water
horse-radish
dill
garlic
pepper
leaves of black current
Cucumbers are pickled in large jars. You can use little ones, it's more comfortable to open them. Clean cucumbers well and put them in cold water for 5-10 hours. Sterilize the jars in the boiling water for 20 minutes. Put a leaf of horse-radish, dill and few cloves of garlic, pepper and couple of black current leaves on the bottom of the jar. Put the cucumbers up to the top. Pour hot water in the jar. Let it cool down for about 10-15 minutes. Pour off this water into a pan, add salt, sugar and boil it again. After boiling add vinegar and let liquid boil for 2-3 minutes. Sterilize the covers in the boiling water for 15 minutes. Pour hot liquid into the jar to the brim. Close the jars with covers. Turn the jar upside down. Cover them with a warm blanket. Leave them for 4-6 hours. If the jars are still warm, let them cool down. Place them in a cool place and keep for months.
Beverages
Traditional Russian beverages are kvas, sbiten, med, mors, voditsa and many others.
In the good old times when Soviet people had no idea about Coca-cola, they drank refreshing and delicious home-made kvas.
Anastasia Web Yulia from Moscow can give you the picture of what it tasted like.
Ingredients:
1 cup boiling water
1 cup rye flour
1 ts sugar
1/4 cup lukewarm water
1 pkg dry granular yeast (7g)
4 quarts boiled water, cooled to lukewarm
Pour boiling water over the flour and stir briskly until smooth. Cool to lukewarm. Dissolve the sugar in the lukewarm water, sprinkle the yeast over it, and let stand for 10 minutes. Combine the cooled batter, cover and let it rise until light and double in bulk. Stir in 4 quarts of boiled water, cooled to lukewarm. Cover and let it stand in a warm place for 3-4 days. When liquid is clear and tastes mildly sour, pour it off carefully with disturbing the sediment. Cover and keep in the refrigerator.
Preeyatnava apetita! (bon appetite) your Anastasia Web Yulia will tell you while serving this wonderful dish.
You answer should be "Balshoye spasiba, daragaya moya!" (Thank you so much, my darling!)
ea
- Each;
tb
- Table spoon;
ts
- Tea spoon;
c
- Cup
Yulia
ID: 1116054
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I have found a woman with whom I think I'm falling in love, so that is why I request my profile's removal. I had fun with your site, and discovered many interesting things about both the women of Russia, as well as their country. I would also like to add that I believe it is true: Russian/ Ukrainian women are drop-dead gorgeous, as well as being real and sincere.
Bob M., Canada
Febuary 2005
Thank you, and also, you have the best site on the web.
Brad
January 2005