- My Mama often made kopytka potato dumplings but I do not remember them ever being fried afterwords.
- I had this dish of rabbit in a garlicky cream sauce with fried kopytka in a restaurant in Wrocław.
- They were super!

- I decided to have a go at these myself.
- Now you can cheat if you have a Polish shop near you that sells ready made kopytka that you can boil first.
- I decided to make these from scratch, which does involve a few steps & time.
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- THE STEPS
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- Boil starchy potatoes
- Leave to go cold
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- Make kopytka
- Boil the kopytka
- Leave to go cold
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- Fry the kopytka
Ingredients
- Starchy potatoes – boiled and left to go cold – around 500 – 600g
- 1 egg & 1 egg yolk
- Plain flour – around 200g
- ½ teaspoon salt
- Sunflower oil for frying
Method
- Peel the potatoes cut them up into pieces and boil them in salted water.
- Drain the potatoes
- Mash them so that there are no lumps.
- I have a ricer which is very good for this.
- Leave the potatoes to cool.
- Use a large bowl and put the cold potatoes into the bowl.
- Lightly beat the egg and the yolk together and add this to the potatoes.
- Add a little salt.
- Weigh out the flour to give an idea of how much is needed,
- This will depend on the type of potato and the size of the eggs.
- Add the flour and mix first with a wooden spoon and then by hand, you might not need all the flour or you may need more.
- Mix until you have a soft dough.
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- Divide the dough into quarters and using a floured board shape the dough and roll it with you hands until you have a long sausage about 3cm in diameter.
- If the dough sticks to the board then you need to add more flour.
- Use a sharp knife to cut the dough into pieces, make the first cut at a diagonal and make the thickness about 1 to 1.5cm.
- You will get a sort of oval shape.
- Repeat this with the rest of the dough.
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- Fill a large pan with water, add some salt and bring this to the boil.
- When the water is boiling, add the dumplings one by one, do not over fill the pan or they will stick together.
- I tend to do this in 4 batches.
- As they cook they will float to the surface, give them about another minute and then remove them with a slotted or a perforated spoon and put them in a colander.
- I have a colander sitting in an empty pan by the side of the large pan in which I am boiling the dumplings.
- I find that the maximum from putting them into the water to taking them out will be 3 minutes, if you cook these too long they will start to fall apart.
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- You need to let the kopytka dry off and go cold.
- NOTE – kitchen roll tends to stick – baking paper is better.






- Gently shallow fry the kopytka in sunflower oil.
- Take care not to burn them.
- Served here on a vintage pyrex plate.
- Good with other fried foods or served with a sauce.
VERDICT
Everyone thought them delicious and want them to be made often!
Dividing the timing of boiling potatoes, making and boiling kopytka and then frying them to serve with a meal needs to be spaced out to make life easier!