






Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Kyrgyzstan.
🥟 Elevate your homemade game—because your kitchen deserves a cult classic!
The CucinaPro Pierogi Maker is a stainless steel manual kitchen tool designed to produce 6 pierogis, dumplings, or similar filled pastries at once. Its durable construction and included tray and press make it easy to create authentic homemade dishes quickly and efficiently, perfect for culinary enthusiasts seeking both tradition and convenience.





| ASIN | B002HWS790 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #161,927 in Kitchen & Dining ( See Top 100 in Kitchen & Dining ) #60 in Pasta Molds & Stamps |
| Blade Material | Stainless Steel |
| Blade Material Type | Stainless Steel |
| Brand | CucinaPro |
| Brand Name | CucinaPro |
| Color | Silver |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,134 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00189384000872 |
| Included Components | Tray and press |
| Is Electric | No |
| Is the item dishwasher safe? | No |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 4"L x 1"W x 11.25"H |
| Item Weight | 265 Grams |
| Manufacture Year | 2023 |
| Manufacturer | CucinaPro |
| Manufacturer Part Number | 135-03 |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | Customer satisfaction guaranteed |
| Material | Metal |
| Material Type | Metal |
| Maximum Sheet Thickness | 5 Millimeters |
| Minimum Sheet Thickness | 4 Millimeters |
| Model Number | 135-03 |
| Number Of Discs | 6 |
| Number of Blades | 6 |
| Number of settings | 1 |
| Operation Mode | Manual |
| Product Dimensions | 4"L x 1"W x 11.25"H |
| UPC | 689978117394 764999787877 189384000872 |
C**S
Easy to use, well made
very easy to use , my MOL, taught me how to make Gioza, Excuse my spelling, Japanese perogies is the closest thing. This works well, it's a time consuming recipe, making a small batch is great, as I make about 200 to freeze. It takes a little getting use to, once you do, it's a delight to see a bunch made, then put on a small tray, into freezer, then into a freezer bag fir easy use, soup, fried, etc.
K**R
Best Pierogi Maker on Amazon
My mother has an old, heavyweight, custom-made pierogi maker from her parents and this is the closest thing I've found to it available on the mass market. It does pretty well. We made 84 dozen pierogi in 2019 with 3 people, so we need something that is efficient and reliable. If you've been using other molds or hand-making pierogi, this is definitely a step up. Since I couldn't travel home this year, I taught two close friends how to make them and they did a great job using this! Picture is of some of their first tries. It is easy to clean and fairly sturdy. Not cast iron weight but it does the job well even with a marble rolling pin! Suggestions: The "legs" actually make pierogi making more difficult as thin dough is ideal and the height created by the legs causes the dough to sag, stretch and tear where the filling goes. To resolve, I added some tin foil wrapped in floured plastic wrap beneath to leave less of a gap between the mold and the table or rolling surface. I may remove the legs in the future, which is probably the ideal solution. I dont use the plastic piece at all, but I suppose it is nice to include. Overall, I would recommend this style over others available on the market. If there was a "legless" version I would pick it up in a heartbeat.
R**5
A definite must buy for all who want to make great pierogi's
Was a bit hesitant after reading the reviews, but decided to try anyways. Tried the next day. Worked fantastic!!! Used our family dough and potato recipes. Made about 35 pierogi's and none opened when boiled. I only gave 4 stars because the box said the press was stainless steel. Seems to be made out of cast metal (maybe the mfg will read this and verify), but is very sturdy. The screws that attach the rubber feet are not stainless either, potential to rust if soaked too long in water. What we did was unscrew the rubber feer prior to washing the press in the sink by hand. Installed rubber feet and screws after press was dry. This is not a issue for us, since it we will probably only use the press a couple of times a year. Here are some key notes for success in using this pierogi press: 1. Follow the instructions that came with it 2. Lightly dust the pierogi maker with flour each time rolling dough 3. Roll the dough to no more than 1/16" to 3/32" (less than 1/8") thick (if the dough does not cut easily when both layers of dough are rolled over, dough is too thick) 4. Press the plastic mold into the press SLOWLY to form the dough pockets 5. Do not over fill, we used about 1.25 to 1.5 tablespoons of potato mix (rolled into football shaped by hand and placed into the pocket) 6. MOST IMPORTANT; use a pastry brush to apply water around the edges of each of the pierogi pockets before rolling on the top layer of dough (see instructions) This will make for the best seal and nearly eliminate pierogi's from opening while boiling. 7. Alwasy keep uncooked pierogi's covered with a cloth so the dough does not dry out. 8. Bring water to full boil then we boiled for about 6-8 minutes. Additionally, we never re-use/roll dough into new dough, keeps the pierogi more tender when boiled (and minimizes opening while boiling) We tested/refrigerated uncooked perogi's for 24 hours, and then boiled next day (for 8-10 minutes). Tasted nearly freshy made. We tested/frozen uncooked pierogi's. Tried a couple of days later, dropped the frozen pierogi into boiling water (needs to boil about 12-15 minutes) came out almost as good as freshly made. Am going to order another one to two so we can speed up the pierogi making process when the family gets together. RC Mesa Arizona
G**D
If you make your own pierogies, buy this.
I have a food concession business and sell pierogies at a fair once a season. For years I used frozen Mrs T's pierogies, but constantly had people coming by asking if I had homemade ones. A couple of years ago, having a lapse of judgement I decided to see if I could make home made ones for the next event- that was a really stupid decision.. I started a month early and spent my evenings making Pierogies from scratch, using one of thoseplastic clamshell single pierogie makers. That first time I made 600 pierogies, about what I was selling of the commercial ones. We sold out in the middle of the week and I had to make more while the event was going on, which was time consuming. This year I decided to see if I could speed up the process, and came across this style of mold which makes 6 at a time; I can not begin to tell you how much this quickened the whole process; I made 1000 of them in 5 evenings instead of 600 in 2 weeks of evenings. Still, we sold out and I ended up making more during the middle of the event, but it was a lot easier 6 at a time. If you intend to make a large batch of pierogies go for this style of maker; it will dramatically improve your quality of liife. One thing I did notice; it has a plastic top section that you puch down into the first sheet of dough to make impressions for the filling. Throw that away; the impressions are very shallow and only hold about a teaspoon of filling if you do it that way. I made mine by just laying the bottom sheet onto the floured base; then roll out a good sized ball of filling in your hands and gently press it down into the dough, then just put the top sheet over it and roll across it with your rolling pin. This makes big fat pierogies with about triple the usual amount of filling that have much better eye appeal- probably why we kept selling out. its only mashed potatoes and shredded cheese; not much cost difference between little thin ones or big fat ones, right?
R**X
Efficient and Easy to Use
Bought this twice! Once for myself, and with how easy it was to use, bought another one as a birthday gift for my mother. The two of us had spent years trying to learn to make pierogi, and this has helped make it from a daunting task to something we can actually enjoy. Before, I spent so much time prepping that the dough would start to dry out by the time I was ready to cook, or my pot would boil out if I did small batches at a time. Now, I make the pierogies faster than I can cook them! While they come out smaller than the ones you get in the store, or by using a fold-over press, it's not really that much of a difference. They stay sealed better too; only have had a couple break open and that was my own fault for rolling the dough out too thin and the seam tore (not boiled open). As long as you take a paper towel and use a little cooking oil on the aluminum and plastic pieces, the dough won't stick to the mould either. Overall, this is the best purchase I've made for my kitchen aside from the pasta press, as it sees the most use after the pasta press (which I use to make pierogi, so does that even count?). If you've been wanting to make pierogi easier, this is the best way to go!
M**E
On the Fence
I bought this because a person highly recommended it. It's ok. It does work but I think my pinching technique is better, less air pocket. I'll work a little more with it and see if I just need to figure out a better way to use it.
K**L
Made the most perfect mini blackberry hand pies!
This worked perfectly for what I was envisioning. I wanted to make quite a few mini blackberry hand pies without having to cut out each circle, fold, and crimp. This was excellent. I made a simple cream cheese pastry dough(8oz cream cheese, 1/2 c butter-both at room temp-1.5 c flour, pinch of salt). After the hand pies were filled, they were fried until golden brown and dipped in a glaze made of cream, powdered sugar, vanilla, and a little fresh lemon juice. Heavenly! Served with vanilla bean ice cream. I had doubled the recipe for the dough, but next time I will quadruple it and freeze half before frying. Not exactly what this was intended for, but super durable and cleanup was a breeze.
G**F
Difficult to use.
I bought several different ones to try. This one looked like it would be the easiest to use. Turns out it was the most difficult. Trying to fill them was really time consuming because if you put even a little too much filling in, they wouldn't seal. The pierogies were way too small and not worth the trouble.
J**N
Excellent Pierogi Maker
Item as described and good quality
W**Y
Best Peroghi maker I’ve tried
Love this. Used my pasta roller on my Kitchenaide rolls the dough out just the right width for the peroghi maker. Made life so much easier and saved so much time. Absolutely perfect
G**G
Fast way to make perogies
Works very well. A lot easier to make perogies now . They are big perogies, I prefer smaller ones . Only issue is rolling the top layer it doesn’t cut thru cleanly so have to press down manually to ensure they pop out easily .
R**H
Quick Perogies
I truly love this, it makes work so quik and easy. I use my pasta maker to roll the dough and then fill and press. Makes 80 pirogies in an hour. Also works great for mini pies or meat pies. Quality is good it will last me a lifetime, washes up good. Just don't use a good rolling pin to press the dough, It will leave dent marks on your pin.
I**A
Quality
Quick delivery. Great quality. Easy and fast to work with when making pierogies. Large size, great if you like lots of filling and uniform shape.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
1 month ago