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Buckwheat Merchant Style with Pork in a Skillet
Instructions
Prepare all the ingredients. Wash the pork meat and cut it into portion-sized pieces. Do not chop the meat too finely. Add mushrooms to the dish if desired; both champignons and forest mushrooms are suitable: fresh, dried, or frozen.
Cut the onion into random pieces, you can use medium cubes or half-rings.
Cut the carrot in two ways – into strips and rounds. The rounds will be needed as decoration.
If necessary, sift the buckwheat to remove poor-quality grains. Be sure to rinse the groats under running water and let them drain through a colander. After drying, it is recommended to fry the buckwheat in a skillet briefly.
In a heated skillet, add odourless vegetable oil. Place the pieces of meat. Fry the meat until properly golden brown on all sides.
Add the prepared onion to the meat. The onion should also be properly golden.
After about five minutes total, add the carrots to the skillet, frying until the ingredients are semi-cooked. The meat and vegetables should not be stewed; they should have a beautiful, golden colour, which affects the overall texture of the dish. Also add the mushrooms to the skillet-sauté pan.
After adding the carrots to the skillet, salt the ingredients and add your favourite spices for the meat. Cumin goes well with carrots, it is also called caraway. It gives a spicy aroma to the dish and a pleasant taste. Be sure to add a pepper mix. Stir the meat and vegetables well in the skillet.
Pour the dried buckwheat evenly over the vegetables. The vegetables are sufficiently salted, but the buckwheat is not. Lightly salt the buckwheat.
Boil water in a kettle, and pour boiling water over the buckwheat. It's better to pour the water through a spoon or skimmer to avoid disturbing the even layer of groats. The liquid should cover the buckwheat by one or one and a half centimetres.
Cover the sauté pan tightly with a lid, do not stir the ingredients. Reduce the heat to below medium. Now the ingredients should stew. Let the buckwheat cook for about ten to fifteen minutes total. After fifteen minutes, check if there is still liquid in the skillet. If the buckwheat has absorbed everything, turn off the heat and stir all the ingredients. Once again, cover the skillet with a lid and let the dish sit for another ten minutes total.
The famous dish buckwheat a la Merchant with pork in a skillet is now properly ready. The buckwheat turned out beautifully crumbly thanks to being pre-dried in the skillet. Serve it on a flat dish, place pieces of meat on top, and arrange the carrot rounds around it, symbolizing gold coins — wealth.We definitely recommend preparing this dish for a family dinner. It's an incredibly tasty and aromatic dish.Bon appétit!
Tips
- 1
Pre-dry the buckwheat groats briefly in a dry skillet before adding to the dish, since this brief toasting step properly develops the iconic nutty finished flavour and produces noticeably more crumbly finished texture. The brief patience for proper pre-drying genuinely matters for the most beautifully fluffy finished buckwheat every single time at home. Watch carefully to prevent burning.
- 2
Don't stir the buckwheat once the boiling water is added — cover the pan tightly and let it absorb the liquid undisturbed for the most properly fluffy finished result. To pair this beautifully classic Russian-style buckwheat dish with another properly traditional homemade preparation from the same culinary tradition, try our beautifully tender cabbage rolls with minced meat and rice as a contrasting cabbage-wrapped meat alternative.
- 3
Add cumin (caraway) seeds for the most beautifully authentic finished aroma, since this specific spice combination defines the proper traditional finished character of buckwheat-merchant style. The brief moment of adding the right spice genuinely matters for the most properly authentic Russian-style finished result every single time. Toast the seeds briefly first to release maximum aroma.
- 4
Decorate the finished dish with carrot rounds arranged around the perimeter, since these "gold coins" are properly traditional symbols of merchant wealth in the iconic name of this classic dish. For another properly classic homemade Russian-cuisine recipe to add variety to your weekly menu, try our beautifully aromatic fried lagman Uzbek style as a contrasting Central Asian-style alternative.
FAQ
Why is it called "Merchant style"? +
Buckwheat a la Merchant (gretchka po-kupechesky) gets its name from the proper Russian merchant tradition of preparing this dish as a hearty, properly affordable, but visually impressive meal. The name reflects the merchant class's preference for substantial filling food that didn't require expensive ingredients but still looked appropriately festive at the family table. The carrot "gold coins" decoration symbolizes the merchant's wealth in a properly traditional culinary metaphor that has survived for centuries.
Can I use other meats? +
Absolutely. Beef, lamb, chicken, or even smoked sausage all work as substitutes for pork in this recipe with broadly similar finished results. Beef produces a richer heartier finished result, chicken gives a leaner lighter finished version, and lamb provides a more pronounced gamey character. Each variation brings its own slightly different finished flavour profile. Adjust the cooking time slightly based on the chosen meat — chicken cooks faster than pork or beef.
How long does this dish keep? +
Store leftover buckwheat with pork covered tightly in the refrigerator for up to four days for best results. Reheat gently in a covered pan over low heat with a small splash of water or broth to restore the original moisture, or in the microwave on medium power for 3-4 minutes per portion. The flavours actually develop slightly during refrigerator storage. The cooked dish also freezes brilliantly in airtight portion-sized containers for up to two months for longer storage.
Can I make this without mushrooms? +
Absolutely. Skip the mushrooms entirely for a simpler finished version that focuses purely on the buckwheat-pork-vegetable combination. The mushrooms are a properly traditional addition but not strictly essential to the iconic finished dish. Substitute with diced bell pepper, frozen peas, sweetcorn, or even diced tomato for properly varied finished flavour profiles instead. Each substitute brings its own character to the pan without compromising the proper traditional feel of the dish.
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