Monday, August 27, 2007

Made from Scratch - Bohemian Plum Dumplings

Riding bike through town recently, I passed a beautiful plum tree full of ripe luscious plums. Damson plums, or Italian Prune Plums : They're smaller than the regular plums you see in the grocery stores. They also have thicker skins.

I'd include a photo of that tree, here, but I haven't been able to find it again ... Sigh!

Here's a picture of the plums we purchased :
You can only get these in the fall. Most other years, we have plum dumplings in September. But things seem to be about 2 weeks early this year ... Global Warming?

Plum Dumplings in the fall is a family tradition for me. It's one of those recipes handed down by doing--no one really ever wrote it down. Gramma Pickles finally bought me a little cookbook from their Bohemian Life Insurance Group that had similar traditional recipes in it (Recipes that used "oleo" instead of butter or margarine.)

Here's the recipe :

Plum Dumplings (Sveskove Knedleky)
2 c. flour
dash of salt
1/2 tsp baking powder
2 eggs
1/2 cup water
14-16 Stanley prune plums

Toppings :
Cottage Cheese
Melted Butter
Cinnamon and Sugar

Mix ingredients together to make dough that will handle easily. Wrap around fruit, covering all holes. Roll into balls. Drop into boiling water and boil 12-15 minutes. When they rise, turn them over in the boiling water. Serve topped with cottage cheese, yogurt, melted butter, and cinnamon sugar.
Here are the dumplings awaiting the boiling water (above).

Here are the plum dumplings in the boiling water. "Look, Ma! No sinkers!"

You just hope you don't have any "sinkers" when you put the dumplings into the boiling water. You want all of your dumplings to float. If you get one that doesn't float, you probably don't want to eat it--it'll be that heavy in your gut, too. When they're done, dinner is served! We eat them with cottage cheese or yogurt, plenty of melted butter, cinnamon and sugar :

Plum Dumplings are the ultimate in comfort food! Bet you wish your computer had smell-o-vision about now, don't you!

We'd have contests to see who could eat the most--evidenced by how many prune pits were left on a person's plate. The winner got a new car--well, not really, but that's what we always said. Usually, it was Grappa ate the most.

8 comments:

Klaus said...

Looks like the dumplings my mum usred to make. Have to try them.Is it half tea or table spoon for baking powder? klaus@burragumbilli.com.au

Anonymous said...

tsp means teaspoon
TBS means table spoon.
goodluck cooking,
Josiah
josiah.gummeson@gmail.com

Arlene said...

So interesting. We grew up with them but, my grandmother made sweet sour plum sauce to go over. I had never seen some of the on line combos

Joe G, Cleveland said...

This is one of mine and my siblings favorite meals from our childhood and I still make them today…all of my daughters love them!! The only difference is we bread them and pan fry them after boiling them and then serve them with sugar to sprinkle on them. A spoonful of the plum, plum juice, fried bread crumbs and sugar is to die for!

Anonymous said...

Differently a keeper

Anonymous said...

Grandma took the seed out and put some sugar and butter in the pit then folded up the dough around it. I’m 76 now and I believe I will make some of these.
76645/. USMC66

Anonymous said...

Haven't had them in a long time a friends gramma use to make them and we would eat til full. Their toppings were, dry cottage cheese, ground Graham crackers, and melted butter.

Anonymous said...

My Grandma made these but cooked them in sweet milk.(milk sweetened with a little sugar)