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: Ella, one of Russian mail order brides from Anastasia International
Ella
ID: 1085648
Send Me an Email
Call Me
Add to Favorites
Send to a Friend
Send Gifts & Flowers
Character:
I am a kind and caring woman who likes to keep active most of her time. I have a big family with two children, and they are the sense of my life. I also am a very sociable person, I have a lot of good friends and acquaintances. I don't have much free time to spend with them, but as soon as I have it I visit them with great pleasure.
Interests:
My main interests go around my family - I like cooking for my closest people, and they like how I do that. I like to spend time with my children, to play with them and to take them for a walk. I also try to keep myself fit and that's why I go in for fitness several times a week.
Looking For Type:
Man of my dream - kind, intelligent, well-educated, caring and loving children.
Looking For Age:
30 - 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 Ella 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.
Deruny
Potato pancakes
The most popular among the Ukrainians are traditional deruny, thick pancakes, made from shredded potatoes. This a staple in Ukrainian homes and these pancakes will store well in the refrigerator for 2-3 days.
Your sweet Anastasia Web Ella from Odessa as a true daughter of Ukrainian people will feed you with the best deruny you've ever had!
Ingredients:
2 lbs of potatoes
2 eggs
black of pepper
2 tbsp of oil
a glass of sour cream
Grate the peeled potatoes. Add eggs, salt and pepper. Stir thoroughly (better with wooden spoon). Put with the spoon small pancakes on the hot frying pan with oil. Fry both sides till pancakes are medium brown. Deruny are served with sour cream. Sometimes they serve as a garnish for the meat dishes.
Ukrainian vatrushky
Cheese tarts
Vatrushky are savory open tarts with cottage cheese. It's a very common Ukrainian snack. Every Ukrainian family has its own, handed down from generation to generation the recipe of vatrushky. They vary greatly but one thing is for sure, the Ukrainians put all their soul into them; no other dish reflects Ukrainian national type better than vatrushky.
Ask your Anastasia Web Ella from Odessa to make vatrushky for you and your friends!
Ingredients:
Dough:
2 cups flour
1 cup milk
1 oz yeast
2 tb sugar
1/2 tb salt
5 tb butter
Filling:
2 cups cottage cheese
3 tb sugar
4 egg yolks
2 tb sour cream
2 tb butter
1 tb flour
grated lemon peel
Mix yeast, sugar, 1 teaspoon of flour in warm milk. Let it rise for 15-20 minutes. Add all the milk and half the flour, mix, let it rise again. When it has risen, add the rest of the flour, salt, butter and mix until it is smooth and elastic.
Let the dough rise once more. Form small buns, put them on a greased baking sheet leaving 2 inches space between them, let rise for 10-15 minutes. Make depressions in the buns with the bottom of a glass. Smear the brims with whisked egg; fill the depression with the filling. Filling:
Rub the cottage cheese through a strainer; add melted butter, grated lemon peel, sour cream, flour, egg yolks whisked with sugar. Mix it well (also, you can stuff vatrushki with a jam, with cranberries minced with sugar, black cherries, apples, etc.) Bake at 200-220� until lightly browne.
Preeyatnava apetita! (bon appetite) your Anastasia Web Ella 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
Ella
ID: 1085648
Print profile
Send Me an Email
Call Me
Add to Favorites
Send to a Friend
Send Gifts & Flowers
<< Back
Olga, you and your associates were very professional on the tour. Also, the interpreters were very good and helped in any situation. I was very grateful to have one of the interpreters from the second social come with Alla and me for about 4 hours on Saturday evening. She was very helpful. I will most likely travel back to the Ukraine in May or June.
Alan C., USA
December 2004
Thank You very much! This is a very good service that You give, so I don't feel I'm waisting money. Thank You!
Aleksander, Norway
January 2005
// 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