Pirog
Pastry of Eastern European origin / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Pirog (Russian: пиро́г, IPA: [pʲɪˈrok] ⓘ; Ukrainian: пиріг pyrih, pl. pyrohy пироги; Belarusian: піро́г; Northern Sami: pirog; Latvian: pīrāgs, pl. pīrāgi; Lithuanian: pyragas, pl. pyragai; Finnish: piirakka; Swedish: pirog) is a baked case of dough with either sweet or savory filling.[1][2] The dish is common in Eastern European cuisines.
Alternative names | Pirogi |
---|---|
Region or state | Eastern Europe |
The name is derived from the ancient Proto-Slavic word pir, meaning "banquet" or "festivity".[3][4][5] The Russian plural, pirogi (with the stress on the last syllable), should not be confused with pierogi (stress on "ro" in Polish and English) in Polish cuisine, which are dumplings similar to Russian pelmeni or Ukrainian varenyky.