This Azerbaijani dish, piti, calls for mint, dried plums, and saffron—ingredients almost impossible to find in most of the Soviet territory, available only to the Kremlin elite. (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

Welcome to No One’s Watching Week, the time of the year when the readers are away, and your tireless editors have run amok. For this week only, Atlas Obscura, the New Republic, Popular Mechanics, Pacific Standard, the Paris Review, and Mental Floss will be swapping content that is too ​out there​ for any other week in 2015. This article originally appeared at the New Republic.

In the CCCP Cook Book, Olga and Pavel Syutkin showcase the bounty of Soviet cuisine through the lens of social realism. Many of the images from the book are from menus for Intourist, the Soviet travel agency begun by Stalin in 1929, which managed foreign travel and tourism in the country. The book also includes images and recipes for the proletariat—how to cook up what ever might become available for the rest of the narod who were forced to queue for hours, or ration their meals. As the authors acknowledge, “Soviet cookery books were designed to convey a sense of abundance and endless variety. In reality, however, things were not so rosy and their illusion of a ‘socialist heaven’ was easily shattered.”

Factory produced ice creams, milk chocolates, and cakes. (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

As a foreigner I had valuta—hard currency, American dollars. My options were basically the same as party elite, since I had the authority to walk into a hard currency supermarket. But the food there was imported from Finland—it was incredibly expensive and far beyond my means, leaving me in the hunt for sustenance with everybody else in the local ruble economy.

Like other Soviet citizens, I became used to going out with several small string bags known as avoska in the event that a car full of apples, cabbage, vegetable oil, or tea bags, had simply “fallen off a truck.” The first winter after the demise of the USSR, there was no fruit to be had, until suddenly in March there was a gold rush of bananas in Moscow, and citizens who were unaccustomed to the fresh tropical fruit left peels in piles in the gutters.

Text on the labels (top to bottom): “Ministry of Food Industry, USSR,” “cherry compote,” “plum compote,” and “apricot compote.” (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

Traveling around the former USSR gave me access to the Intourist hotels and restaurants. The opening question from a customer to the wait staff in any restaurant, assuming you were allowed to sit down, was simple: “What do you have?” There was no use wasting one’s time looking at a menu—most of what was described was unavailable. A scowling state-employed waiter might bring a Stolichny Salat (mayonnaise, pickles, tiny chopped potatoes, maybe a spring of parsley) or, if I was very lucky, Gribni Julienne, creamy baked mushrooms to slather on a slice of black bread.

One of the most popular hors d’oeuvres of the Soviet era, Gribni Julienne, is baked individually in cocottes. (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

I experienced the twilight of Soviet cuisine. Olga and Pavel Syutkin explain that the golden age began with reforms of the 1930s that brought technology from the West, as well as food distribution systems, which led to an increase in variety of recipes, the establishment of Soviet flavors, and even the publication of cookbooks with quality paper stock. Not all food was available all the time, however. Any “Capital” Salat, in pre-revolutionary times was known as the holiday dish Olivier Salat and it originally called for capers, grouse, crayfish tails, and black caviar. By the end of the 1930s, capers had disappeared and grouse and crayfish were hard to come by, so a chef in Moscow recreated it by replacing grouse with chicken and tinned peas for capers, and carrots replaced crayfish. Stolichny Salat became one of the standards of Soviet cuisine.

Tinned green peas and mayonnaise are vital ingredients of the Stolichny Salat. (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

I would visit my Russian friends as often as they would invite me to simple meals of borscht and fried potatoes, or Okroshka, translated by the Syutkins as “mystery ingredients,” in short, any food you can find cut into small cubes. Frankfurters, cucumbers, radishes, hard-boiled eggs, with obligatory smetana (a type of sour cream), could all be included, and during a food shortage Okroshka became a popular meal.



Okroshka, translated by the authors as “Mystery Ingredients.” (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

The authors of the CCCP Cook Book are food historians, and the recipes they include come with historical anecdotes that contextualize the dish. Many Soviet cookbooks were written for the public-catering industry, and recipes would have three columns to specify portion size depending on the target consumer: restaurants for the elite, cafés for the middle class, and canteens that fed workers and educational institutions.

The recipes in the third column were the least nutritious, using less butter and meat. For studded beef, for instance, a single serving contained 125g of meat in the first column, 100g in the second, and only 70g in the third. The shortfall was made up with increased amounts of pasta, rice, or potatoes. In this respect, the “culinary heaven” for workers was so modest it barely met the nutritional minimum.

Stuffed venison fillet, set in aspic and garnished with vegetables. (Illustration: CCCP Cook Book)

Soviet aspics are dishes designed to evoke aristocratic banquets for the common man: Pikeperch patties with mayonnaise sauce and jelly and stuffed venison fillet set in a gelatin aspic are literal towers to Soviet imagination and no doubt, the state’s culinary achievement.

MOSKOVSKY BORSCHT

For nine to 12 servings:

3 litres meat or vegetable stock

2 tbsp butter

2 small onions

1 carrot

3 medium-sized beets

2 large tomatoes (or 3-4 tinned tomatoes or 3 tbsp tomato purée)

Juice from half a lemon

2 tsp sugar

2 medium-sized potatoes

2 or 3 bay leaves

3 or 4 cloves

Garlic, salt, and pepper to taste

One small chili pepper and a selection of fresh herbs (dill, parsley, coriander, etc.)

Sugar and vinegar to taste sour cream or horseradish to serve

Make a meat or vegetable stock and prepare the rest of the ingredients while it is cooking. Melt the butter in a deep pan and add the onions and carrots, both sliced into thin strips. Cook until lightly brown, then add the beet, sliced in the same way. Add the grated tomatoes or tomato purée, lemon juice and sugar and stir well.

When the mixture comes to the boil, cover and simmer for 40 minutes, stirring occasionally to prevent sticking. When the stock is ready, add the finely diced potatoes and, five to seven minutes later, add the cooked vegetable mixture. It is imperative at this point not to let the soup boil—keep the heat low and simmer for three minutes.

Add the bay leaves, salt and pepper, and chili pepper if you want a more spicy soup, along with sugar or vinegar to taste. If you made meat stock, add the finely sliced meat. Add the sliced garlic and fresh herbs if required then remove the soup from the heat and allow it to cool for 30 minutes. Serve with sour cream. If you use vegetable stock and sauté the vegetables in vegetable oil, the borscht can be served cold with sour cream or horseradish. Borscht reaches the peak of its flavor the next day, so it is often left to sit for a day or two in the fridge.