‘Tis the season of lights, cookie baking, holiday parties
and Christmas concerts. It is also the season of sala vecis (Father
Frost): snow, freezing rain, cold winds and dark days. Therefore, make time
this season for curling up with a book, watching the fire, listening to your
favorite Baltic Christmas music, and cooking up a batch of comfort food.
Peas, grains and beans have long been staples of Baltic
cuisine, due to ease of storage and the short growing season that enable
successful crops even during the short, cool Latvian summers. Full of vitamins
B, C and E, they are also a valuable source of protein, and their pervasiveness
on the Latvian menu persisted until the introduction of the potato in the early
19th century. Probably the most famous of these for Latvians are pelēkie
zirņi, or grey peas. Considered the unofficial national food, grey peas are
a traditional food of New Year's Eve, when tradition dictates every person must
eat at least a handful and the pot of peas must be eaten entirely so that no
tears will be shed in the New Year. Grey peas and bacon are one of the most
popular traditional Latvian dishes during the holiday season, and in many
households a place for them is guaranteed on the Christmas table; find the 24
Days of a Baltic Christmas recipe and post here: pelēkie zirņi with bacon.
Your biggest hurdle in preparing any dish with pelēkie
zirņi will be to source the grey peas. Balticshop.com stocks them, but
requires 2-3 weeks to ship from Latvia, so your best bet might be to get in
touch with someone traveling from Latvia, or to visit one of the seasonal
Ziemassvētku tirdziņi held in your area. Another option is to purchase
something similar from a European Imports store; I have found Dutch kapucijners
to be very similar in taste and preparation (purchase kapucijners, or marrowfat
peas online at TheDutchStore.com).
To prepare pītes, you will need the following ingredients:
500g grey peas (the grey peas we buy usually come in
packages of 500 grams, which is a little over 1 pound)
2 lb. potatoes (can be adjusted to preference – some recipes
have 2x the peas as potatoes)
½ lb. smoked bacon, chopped
1 small onion, diced
3 tbsp butter*
1.5 tsp linseed or flax seed (optional)
Salt to taste
To prepare:
Rinse the peas, and soak for 8-12 hours in 8 cups of
water.
Bring to a boil, then lower heat and simmer for 90 to 120
minutes.
Boil the potatoes separately.
In a pan, sauté the smoked bacon and onions.
Once the potatoes are tender, smash them. Add the peas,
bacon and onions, butter, linseed and salt, and mix.
Top with chopped dill or chives and serve! The
traditional pītes are rolled into round balls, but we skip this extra
step. My boys like them with a dollop of sour cream, and I imagine they would also pair well with sēņu mērce.
* The traditional pītes would have utilized
hempseed butter
With less than two weeks remaining until Christmas, we
are in the second half of the series and in the home stretch! Hope you are
enjoying 24 Days of a Baltic Christmas, and see you tomorrow for a special invitation…
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