Odessa-style walnut stuffed prunes. Tasty recipes online from famous chefs.

Odessa-style walnut stuffed prunes

All the Christmas chores are not about rituals at all. They are about family, care, love, and warmth. About a holiday that gathers the whole family at the table once a year, without exception, and those who have become an integral part of it, like god parents. In an Odessa family, Ukrainians and Russians, Poles and Armenians, Jews and Bulgarians, Greeks and Abkhazians gather at one table. Everyone has their own religion, and our tables are not Lenten. But Christmas unites everyone and is equally loved in every family. Of course, you can cook kholodets in May, maybe it will even be tastier, but will so many events unfold around it in May? And whoever sits down at the Odessa Christmas table, there are always sweet prunes soaked in wine in a sparkling crystal serving dish, with a crunchy walnut in the middle, and a huge snow cap of airy cream, definitely the best cream from Privoz.

  • Prep time: 25 minutes + 2-3 hours’ cooling
  • Cook time: 15 minutes
  • Serves: 2
  • Difficulty: easy
  • Course: dessert
  • Cookware: saucepan
  • Cuisine: Odessa

Ingredients

  • 350 g pitted prunes, dried or smoked
  • 250 ml dry red wine
  • 250 ml hot water
  • 150 g sugar
  • 150 g walnuts
  • 200 ml sour cream, at least 30% fat

For the decoration:

  • nuts or chocolate, finely grated

Cooking method

Step 1

Cook the syrup. In a bowl, mix water, wine, and sugar so that the sugar is completely dissolved. Put prunes in a saucepan, pour over syrup. Put on the heat, and bring the syrup to boil. Then drain the syrup, put the prunes on a paper towel and let them to cool and dry.

Step 2

Heat the oven to 160°C. Cover the baking sheet with parchment paper. Put walnuts on it. Dry the nuts in a preheated oven for 3-5 minutes. Take out, and let them cool.

Step 3

Insert 1/4 of the walnut into each prune in place of the pits. Put the prunes in a serving dish. Top with sour cream. Cover with cling film. Refrigerate for 2-3 hours. Sprinkle prunes with grated nuts or chocolate before serving. ⠀

My tips and tricks:

When you go to the market for prunes, choose the larger and fatter ones. And, of course, it’s better to buy them pitted. But if you buy the prunes with pits, then gently take them out after boiling the prunes in the syrup, and while they are still hot. My recipe has two secrets. First, I dry the nuts lightly for a more intense flavour. The second, since I cook prunes in sugar syrup, I don’t add sugar to the sour cream, and it remains thick, does not flow and lies like a beautiful white cap.

Odessa-style walnut stuffed prunes
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
Author:
Recipe type: dessert
Cuisine: Odessa
Serves: 2
Ingredients
  • 350 g pitted prunes, dried or smoked
  • 250 ml dry red wine
  • 250 ml hot water
  • 150 g sugar
  • 150 g walnuts
  • 200 ml sour cream, at least 30% fat
  • For the decoration:
  • nuts or chocolate, finely grated
Cooking method
  1. Cook the syrup. In a bowl, mix water, wine, and sugar so that the sugar is completely dissolved. Put prunes in a saucepan, pour over syrup. Put on the heat, and bring the syrup to boil. Then drain the syrup, put the prunes on a paper towel and let them to cool and dry.
  2. Heat the oven to 160°C. Cover the baking sheet with parchment paper. Put walnuts on it. Dry the nuts in a preheated oven for 3-5 minutes. Take out, and let them cool.
  3. Insert ¼ of the walnut into each prune in place of the pits. Put the prunes in a serving dish. Top with sour cream. Cover with cling film. Refrigerate for 2-3 hours. Sprinkle prunes with grated nuts or chocolate before serving. ⠀
My tips and tricks
When you go to the market for prunes, choose the larger and fatter ones. And, of course, it's better to buy them pitted. But if you buy the prunes with pits, then gently take them out after boiling the prunes in the syrup, and while they are still hot. My recipe has two secrets. First, I dry the nuts lightly for a more intense flavour. The second, since I cook prunes in sugar syrup, I don't add sugar to the sour cream, and it remains thick, does not flow and lies like a beautiful white cap.