Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

The turkey in traditional Bulgarian cuisine

Photo: Krassimira Vassileva

Unlike Christmas Eve, when meat is not eaten, the meal on Christmas Day is opulent with lots of meat dishes. And though turkey recipes are for family get-togethers (because turkeys are big birds and can feed a lot of people), in Bulgarian cuisine they are not necessarily associated with Christmas, says Ilian Dimitrov, author of a de-luxe edition of over 1,500 traditional Bulgarian recipes, and co-author of a gastronomical guide to a multitude of Bulgarian cuisine blogs.

Ilian Dimitrov

 In an interview with Radio Bulgaria, Ilian Dimitrov said that when it comes to traditional winter turkey recipes, the first thing that springs to mind is roast turkey with sauerkraut. Here are some of the finer points of cooking turkey in traditional Bulgarian cuisine.

Unlike the American turkey recipes, where the turkey is stuffed and roasted whole, in Bulgaria it is cooked in pieces, having been boiled or stewed in wine beforehand to make the meat more tender. Often, pork fat or lard is used to make the meat richer.

Photo: Darina Nikolova

If the bird is cooked whole, it is usually stuffed with a filling – usually of rice, plus raisins or prunes and sour apples. When it comes to turkey winter recipes, the ingredients of the filling can be of roots and tuber vegetables like carrots, celery, parsley and parsnip roots, and, of course, lots of leek. Not to forget the giblets which are usually boiled or browned and added to the filling. In the countries of Western Europe and the US, lots of spices are used, but in this country the recipes usually only have things like salt, pepper and paprika, parsley and sometimes bay leaf.

Here is the Christmas recipe Ilian Dimitrov chose especially for Radio Bulgaria:

Roast turkey with sauerkraut  

Photo: Krassimira Vassileva

Ingredients for 16 servings: 1 turkey weighing about 4 kgs., 1 average-sized head of sour cabbage, 1 onion, one and a half coffeecupful of vegetable oil or melted lard, 1 teacupful of white wine, 10-12 peppercorns, 1 bay leaf, salt.

Rinse the turkey and boil in a big pot of hot water over medium heat, 30 minutes after the water has started to boil, add salt. Meanwhile, slice the head of cabbage into thin strips and stew it with the oil, add the chopped onion, and water and cabbage juice in equal parts – the liquid should cover half of the cabbage. Put the boiled turkey (whole or cut up into individual helpings) and the stewed cabbage in a cooking pan, add the wine, the black pepper and the bay leaf. Bake at a low temperature, occasionally adding some hot water, turning the turkey and stirring the cabbage.

And don’t forget – roast turkey is best paired with a glass of aromatic Bulgarian wine.



Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

Participants of the International Folklore Festival in Veliko Tarnovo will go on parade

Nearly 340 participants from countries on different continents will take the stage at the Summer Theatre in Marno Pole Park in Veliko Tarnovo to present the their folklore traditions.  The start is today, 20 July, when the traditional..

published on 7/20/24 6:15 AM

The Regional Ethnographic Museum in Plovdiv helps to revive the ancient craft of felting

Products made of wool inspire the feeling of inner comfort and warmth in the visitors of the Plovdiv Regional Ethnographic Museum. The exhibition "Bulgarian felts - a message from antiquity" presents an ancient craft, which is..

published on 7/13/24 8:30 PM

Esther Willems - choreographer from The Hague who believes that the Bulgarian soul is encoded in the dances

The Hague, a city in the south of the Netherlands, the administrative centre and the place where the Queen lives and works...  Hardly anyone associates this city with Bulgarian folklore and traditions. But the fact is that the interest in..

published on 7/4/24 8:12 PM