Skip to content
ScaleRecipe

Russian · Dessert

Strawberries Romanoff

Cook mode
Watch video
Fruity
Strawberries Romanoff

About this recipe

Russian cooking traditions favour preserved foods (pickles, smoked fish, cured meats), beet-based soups, hearty dumplings, and the dairy-rich baking of long winters. Most dishes are built for cold weather and large tables.

As a dessert, Strawberries Romanoff is the part of cooking where ratio precision matters most: a five-percent miss on flour or sugar changes the texture in a way no savoury dish would notice. Weighing in grams beats measuring in cups every time.

Set your servings in the scaler above and every line of the recipe rewrites itself with smart fractions and unit promotion. Open Cook Mode to step through it hands-free with timers running.

Curated by the ScaleRecipe editorial teamReviewed

Recipe data is sourced from TheMealDB's open community database; ScaleRecipe handles the curation, the scaling math, the editorial commentary, and the conversion utilities woven into each page.

Translate this recipe

Reading in English

Listen to this recipe

No matching voice on this device

Method

  1. In a medium bowl, combine hulled and quartered strawberries, 4 Tbsp sugar and 4 Tbsp liqueur, stir to combine then cover and refrigerate at least 1 hour and up to 2 hours, stirring once or twice.
  2. Two photos of cut strawberries in a bowl with one having sugar being added to the bowl Two photos of cut up strawberries for Strawberry Romanoff
  3. Just before serving, in a large mixing bowl, combine 1 cup cold heavy cream and 1/4 cup powdered sugar, and beat with an electric mixer until stiff peaks form. Using a spatula, fold in 1/4 cup sour cream just until well blended.
  4. To serve, stir strawberries then divide between 6 serving glasses or bowls. You can spoon a little syrup over the berries if you like. You can also use this syrup to soak a cake. Spoon cream over strawberries, dividing evenly. You can also use an ice cream scoop with trigger release for a nice rounded puff of cream. Serve right away or chill and enjoy within 2 hours of assembly.

Cooking notes

Baked goods are unforgiving with rounding — use weights rather than volumes whenever possible, and verify pan capacity if you scale up or down significantly.

For volume-to-weight conversions of any ingredient — flour, sugar, butter, salts — use the ingredient converter. To translate the recipe's oven temperature between °C, °F and gas mark, see the temperature converter.

When you scale this recipe up or down, remember that cooking time does not scale linearly. A doubled cake takes longer, but not twice as long; a doubled soup takes roughly twice as long. The cooking-time guide gives sensible starting estimates by dish geometry.

Scaling notes

Scaling Strawberries Romanoff

Strawberries Romanoff is written for around four servings as it stands on this page — scaling it up for a party or down for a meal-for-one is the small math problem most home cooks face every week. Here's how this particular dish responds to scaling, what changes linearly, and what doesn't.

Desserts are the most scaling-sensitive category, and Strawberries Romanoff is no exception — the leavening, fat, and liquid ratios all interact. Doubling means a doubled pan AREA (not diameter), and bake time scales by the cube root of the volume change: a doubled cake takes about 26 % longer, not 100 %. Weigh ingredients in grams rather than measuring in cups for consistent results.

Skip the math entirely — ScaleRecipe's scaler rewrites every ingredient line above with proper culinary fractions and smart unit promotion the moment you change the serving count. Open the scaler →

Beyond the recipe

Substitutions & make-ahead — Strawberries Romanoff

Two things home cooks ask about most when they're outside the recipe's exact assumptions: what swaps work for which ingredients, and how the dish behaves when you make it ahead. Both depend on what Strawberries Romanoff is doing structurally — here's the practical version.

Substitution ideas

Sour cream

Full-fat plain Greek yogurt substitutes 1:1 with slightly more tang and less fat. For baking specifically, full-fat plain yogurt or crème fraîche keeps the texture closer. Low-fat options break the structure — fat is doing the work, not the bacterial tang.

For weight-based swaps and arbitrary quantities, the ingredient density converter and the cup-to-grams chart cover most pantry staples.

Make-ahead and storage

Most desserts in Strawberries Romanoff's family can be made one day ahead, but storage matters more than for savoury dishes. Cakes and breads go in an airtight container at room temperature — refrigeration stales them faster than room air. Custards, cream-based fillings, and any dessert with eggs as a structural ingredient must refrigerate. For freezer storage, unfrosted cake layers wrap tightly and keep 2 months; frosted versions ice-crystal within 3-4 weeks.

Recipe video

Strawberries Romanoff

Go deeper

Where this recipe sits in the wider tradition.

Each guide below is a real essay on the cuisine or the category — pillars, staples, techniques worth learning — paired with a curated grid of recipes filed under it.

Ready to cook?

Scale it to your table, then get into the kitchen.

Send this recipe to the main scaler for further editing, or jump straight into Cook Mode for a hands-free walk-through with timers running.