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Bangor, Maine 04401
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Personal ads with photos: Irina, one of Russian mail order brides from Mariupol
Irina
ID: 1104730
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Character:
If I am in love I can be faithful and romantic. When I love someone I can be very intense in my love for him, but not to the point of destruction. I am very tolerant to different views. I like to talk about many things with my lover. Talking is very important for me. It stimulates the senses as well as the intellect. I am kind and even-tempered person.
Interests:
I like sport, music, dances, singing. I also love to travel and know as much as possible to have good memories when I become old.
Looking For Type:
You could be a great companion who is easy to spend time with, and may be eager to try many different activities. I want to be with a man that values his family above all. I appreciate if you are intelligent, educated and with a good sense of humour.
Looking For Age:
25 - 45
Ukrainian women love to cook. Traditional dishes of Ukrainian cuisine are aromatic and contain a wide variety of herbs and spices, including garlic, parsley, dill, mint, mustard, pepper and cinnamon. Bread is provided with all savory dishes and is of a high quality. When dining with guests, either wine or vodka and mineral water are usually drunk.
Ukrainian borsch with meat
Borshch is a Ukrainian beet soup. It could be described as a national soup of Ukraine. Filled with beets and other vegetables from a typical Ukrainian garden, it is a hearty soup which could be found on almost every dinner table. Here is one of more than 500 versions of borshch recipes.
How about a plate of Ukrainian borstch? Nothing can warm your heart and stomach better than this traditional soup meal.
Ask Anastasia Web Irina to make it for you!
Ingredients:
1/4 pound salt pork, diced
1 large leek, thinly sliced
1 medium onion, sliced
1 celery or parsley root (about 6 ounces), peeled and cut in thin strips
3 beet (about 1/2 pound), peeled and shredded
1/2 head cabbage (about 1/2 pound), thinly sliced
2 quarts water
1 1/2 pounds cooked meat such as kielbasa (Polish sausage), ham, beef, or pork, diced
1 can (8 ounces) whole tomatoes
1 c rye flour kvas
2 tb flour
1 ts salt
1/2 ts pepper
1 1/2 ts lemon juice or vinegar
1 c whipping cream or dairy sour cream horseradish (optional)
Fry salt pork until golden in a 5-quart kettle. Add leek and onion. Fry until onion is transparent. Add celery root, beets, cabbage, water, and meat. Cook until celery root is crisp tender; about 25 minutes. Add tomatoes and kvas, mix. Cook over medium heat for 30 minutes. Make a smooth paste of butter and flour; stir into the simmering soup. Cook and stir until soup thickens. Add salt, pepper, and lemon juice; mix. To serve, spoon a small amount of cream and horseradish into each bowl. Ladle hot soup into bowl and stir to blend with the cream and horseradish.
Hussar Roast
Ingredients:
2/3 cup vinegar or vodka
1 beef round rump roast, boneless, or round tip roast (3 pounds)
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 ts salt
1/4 ts pepper
1/4 cup butter, melted
1 large onion, quartered
1 cup bouillon or meat stock
Stuffing:
1 ts butter
2 medium onions, minced
1/4 cup fine dry bread crumbs
1 egg, beaten
Heat vinegar to boil in a large casserole or skillet. Add meat, turning to scald all sides. Drain meat. Discard vinegar. Mix flour, salt, and pepper. Coat meat with seasoned flour. Reserve 2 tablespoons seasoned flour. Brown meat in butter in a Dutch oven or heavy skillet. Add quartered onion and bouillon. Cover; simmer 2 hours, or until meat is tender.
Slice meat about 1 inch thick. Then slit each slice, making a pocket. For stuffing, melt butter. Saut? minced onion until transparent. Stir in bread crumbs and 1 tablespoon seasoned flour. Remove from heat. Stir in egg. Stuff crumb mixture into pockets in meat. Close and skewer with wooden picks. Tie together with string in original roast shape. Return to Dutch oven. Sprinkle with remaining tablespoon seasoned flour. Cover; cook over medium-low heat for 30 minutes.
Ukrainian syrnyky
Cottage cheese fritters
Ukrainian syrnyky, or cottage cheese fritters, is a traditional Ukrainian dish. These tasty little pancakes are usually topped with jam or sour cream.
Your sweet Anastasia Web Irina from Mariupol will please you with the perfect syrnyky for breakfast or lunch!
Ingredients:
1 lb of cottage cheese
1/2 glass of sugar
3 eggs
2 glasses of flour
2 oz of melted butter
1 glass of sour cream
a little salt
Whisk eggs with salt and sugar into thick froth. Add minced cottage cheese and 1.5 glasses of flour. Knead thoroughly. Put the dough onto the board sifted with flour, and form a thick roll. Slice it into pieces as thick as a finger. Put each slice into flour, and make its form like a cutlet with a knife. Fry in butter in a frying pan at the medium heat, both sides.
Serve with sour cream.
Preeyatnava apetita! (bon appetite) your Anastasia Web Irina 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
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Irina
ID: 1104730
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I did not use the interpreters much but Nina Fedorova was very pleasant. Both Margarita and Tatiana were pleasant and very helpful. Both seemed genuinely concerned about our well being safety and happiness.The tour guide Natasha was very pleasant and knowledgeable but there is so much to see in a cultural Mecca like St. Petersburg that the tours could have been longer.
Glenn L., USA, FL
October 2004
I appreciate your good effort and professionalism. The flight back was good though very long but with many more memmories than when I left. I loved everyday of the tour and I think everyone else I talked to did also. The talk was about when we would return not if we would return. I have no complaints, only positive experiences and many new friends to last a life time.
Dave G., USA
October 2004
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