In our region, an ethnic group called the Doukhobours moved in during the 1920s & '30s. They were a pacifist agricultural group from Russia who were fed-up with being drafted into the Tsar's armies, and they began immigrating to Canada before World War One. As they had always lived and raised food in a northern region of the world, they were comfortable relocating to Canada more or less along the southern border. Hence this
borscht recipe, shared with my wife by a Doukhobour woman, is well suited to making use of ingredients that are commonly grown in more northerly climates with somewhat short growing seasons.
Our benefactor was from the segment of the Doukhobour people that is
vegetarian, and so is the recipe as given below — though not all of the Doukhobours are, and hence there is no reason (even in tradition) to refrain from adding meat or meat stock.
Full disclosure... The recipe as I'm giving it is a result of some experimentation, and inevitably is a slight drift from the original that we were given. And it goes without saying that if you want to make more soup you just scale-up the ingredients, and that works fine...
Ingredients you'll need:
1 litre (or quart) home-canned in their juice or equivalent of tomatoes. Stick a knife in and dice them, or blend.
3 largish potatoes, peeled & diced
½ head of green cabbage, knife-shaved or “shredded”
Approx 2 litres
water - this may consist (up to 1/3) of soup stock on-hand
3 large onions, diced medium-small
2 largish stalks of celery, diced fine
1 large beet, diced fine or blended with the tomatoes
1 large carrot, diced
1-
1/2 cup of whole
milk (or 1 cup milk, 1/2 cup cream)
Cooking oil
Butter
1-2 tablespoons of finely-chopped dill
Salt
Milk or cream
Into a soup pot of at least 3-litre capacity, put the litre of tomatoes with their water and add water, or water/soup-stock combination. (I bring the liquid to within an inch-and-a-half of the pot's rim.) Add the diced potatoes, beet, and carrot. Heat just under boiling level.
Take a large
skillet, heat it on the stove, coat the bottom with cooking oil (and add butter if you like – using your own discretion), and introduce the diced onions and celery. Stir and sautée these thoroughly, then add them into the soup.
Add the milk and/or cream and stir in. (Traditional Doukhobour cooks tended to use pure cream.) Add dill and stir in, preferably within a half hour of serving.
The aim is for a full-flavored, sweet & savory nourishing soup. Experiment with this to get the soup to your liking.