Pierogis, baked bacon















This meal takes a lot of baking trays. 

1) a tray to have the filling ready in little balls
2) a tray for a floured towel to hold formed raw pierogis. They must not touch or stick.
3) a tray oiled to hold boiled pierogis to slide around on, again to prevent sticking. 
4) a tray with its rack for the bacon but that is extra.

They're basically pot stickers. You can line them up and fry them as such. This is how I prefer them. Fried in butter and crisp. They're much better to me this way. Sour cream, fried onions, what have you, all that is nice, but so is an Asian dipping sauce. 

This mashed potato does not have any butter nor milk, to keep it kind of dry, it does have a lot of cheese to compensate.

This dough is similar to Asian noodle dough that uses an acid or base to adjust pH and mess with the flour forcing it to become much more cooperative, more elastic, and more cohesive and adhesive. The dough stretches around the potato and pinches shut easily. 

My dough is made with about 30% semolina flour, the rest all purpose. I also don't bother with making a well in the pile of flour. I don't understand that nonsense. It's as if early foreign housewives devised ways to avoid cleaning a large bowl. Or maybe they didn't have a large bowl. I don't know. There is no advantage to not using a bowl. 

Because the dough has a touch of acid, it is very easy to use. I do not have sour cream. But I do have regular cream and lime, that is what I used. Vinegar would work as well, just a tablespoon will alter the dough and its properties considerably.

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