Anastasia International Inc.
40 High St Suite #1
Bangor, Maine 04401
+1 (207) 262-9595
+1 (800) 356-3130
+1 (877) 345-1677
Search
Sign Up
Login
Yummy perspectives
Personal ads with photos: Anna, one of beautiful Russian brides from Odessa
Anna
ID: 1117731
Send Me an Email
Call Me
Add to Favorites
Send to a Friend
Send Gifts & Flowers
Video Chat
Character:
I am a very romantic woman. I am told to be tender and gentle, sincere and honest. I am a woman with open heart and clear feelings. People like to be beside me since I’m positive and smiling most time. I adore the sound of sea waves and sunny days, flowers and children laughing. I am very caring, sensitive and understanding. I am good listener and you’ll never feel boring with me.
Interests:
I like dancing and listening to music, reading interesting books, meeting with my friends, walking in the park or near the sea. I adore cinema and theatre and I usually go there to get new pleasant impression. I like to spend my time with interesting people, because I like to get to know something new and exciting. There is so much to do in the world and I wish to explore it all. I dream about traveling to many places and experience new cultures and people.
Looking For Type:
I wish to find a man to be my lover, partner and friend. I dream of mutual love and understanding. Love is a very deep feeling and I want it to burn in my heart the whole life. I have much to give you, but you must know how to take it. My man should be kind, open-minded and honest. I appreciate honesty and devotion in a relationship. I believe you have many interests and you’re not passive in life.
Looking For Age:
34 - 49
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 Anna 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.
Golubtsy
Stuffed cabbage rolls
Golubtsy are Ukrainian cabbage rolls. The filling is mainly rice with a small amount of hamburger (unlike other East European cabbage rolls which are mainly hamburger with a small amount of rice). The golubtsy are placed in a large pot, covered with tomato sauce and baked. The word "golub" in Ukrainian means "dove"; golubtsi are made in the shape of a dove.
Are you hungry? Have you had dinner yet? Wanna try Ukrainian golubtsy? Anastasia Web assures you Anna from Odessa makes them so yummy!
Ingredients:
Whole head cabbage (about 4 pounds)
boiling salted water
1 onion, chopped
2 tb oil
1 1/2 pounds ground beef
1/2 pound ground fresh pork
1 1/2 cups cooked rice
1 ts salt
1/4 ts pepper
2 cans (about 10 ounces each) condensed tomato soup
2 1/2 cups water
Remove core from cabbage. Place whole head in a large kettle filled with boiling salted water. Cover; cook for 3 minutes, or until softened enough to pull off individual leaves (about 30). Cut thick center stem from each leaf. Chop remaining cabbage. Saut? onion in oil. Add meat, rice salt, and pepper. Mix thoroughly. Place a heaping tablespoonful of meat mixture on each cabbage leaf. Tuck sides over filling while rolling leaf around filling. Secure with wooden picks.
Place half the chopped cabbage on bottom of a large Dutch oven. Fill with layers of the cabbage rolls. Cover with remaining chopped cabbage.
Combine tomato soup with water; mix until smooth. Pour over cabbage rolls. Cover and bring to boiling. Reduce heat and simmer 1 1/2 hours. Serve cabbage rolls with the sauce.
Pompushky
Ukrainian donuts
Pompushky resemble Pepperidge farm's rolls. There are no holidays without pompushky. Every region of Ukraine has its own recipes and traditions of baking them.
It takes a lot of patience and skills to make them. However, we are sure your sweet Anastasia Web Anna from Odessa will succeed in pleasing you with the perfect pompushky!
Ingredients:
8 cups flour
2 pkgs yeast
3 cups milk
2 tb olive oil
2 ts sugar
4 eggs
1 ts salt
Let yeast stand for 10 minutes. In a large bowl, put in part of the flour (about 6 cups), making a well in the middle. Beat the eggs lightly, add melted butter, milk, sugar and salt. Add this mixture to the flour along with yeast. Mix well and knead until dough is soft and not sticky adding the remaining flour only as necessary. Knead about 10 minutes. Cover and let rise in a warm spot until double in bulk. Punch down and knead lightly. Let it rise again. Take a small amount of dough; roll on a lightly floured table. It must be fairly thick. Cut out rounds, coffee mugs work well. Place a small amount of filling in the center bringing the edges together and pinch well to seal tightly. Place pompushky seam side down on lightly floured surface, cover and let rise a while, for about 15 minutes. Do not let over rise. Fry in oil, about 375F for about 3 minutes, turning them to brown on both sides. Drain on paper towels.
Preeyatnava apetita! (bon appetite) your Anastasia Web Anna 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
// Provide alternate content for browsers that do not support scripting // or for those that have scripting disabled. Alternate HTML content should be placed here. This content requires the Macromedia Flash Player.
Get Flash
Anna
ID: 1117731
Print profile
Send Me an Email
Call Me
Add to Favorites
Send to a Friend
Send Gifts & Flowers
Video Chat
<< Back
Dearest Irina I appreciate your professionalism in these matters, I am staying focused , and learning more patience , and disciplined like a soldier, I really do believe, I will find my true love, for I am very positive, and I am not a quitter because perseverance is infinite, I am also learning my mistakes that will make me a better man, I believe if you learn from your mistakes you get a second chance, but if you ignore them you loose your chance, these are rules I live by, and never alter them, must go to work now, take care my dearest friend, Respectfully
Thomas, CA, USA
September 2004
Just a note to thank you and your Tour Company for the help find my wife. We met each other April 2000 in St.Petersburg in Club Hollywood. Travelled to St. Petersburg at age 16. she has a 5-year bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering, a 4-year bachelor’s degree in Economics and Finances and 3 years of Technical School in Economics. Half of this was done with a job and trying to raise her daughter who is 15 years old. I must say, that it does my heart good to see a couple stayed married through good and bad. You should be proud of your successful business. Thanks again.
Gary D., Bangor, Maine
May 2004
// Provide alternate content for browsers that do not support scripting // or for those that have scripting disabled. Alternate HTML content should be placed here. This content requires the Macromedia Flash Player.
Get Flash