Borsch without a ‘t’: Kyiv chef uses food to reclaim culture

A customer eats borsch in a restaurant in central Kyiv, Ukraine on Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023. Borsch was declared an asset of “intangible national heritage” by UNESCO in July 2022, a decision which helped put Ukrainian food on the map. (AP Photo/Chris Warde-Jones)

A plate of borsch is served in a restaurant in central Kiev, Ukraine on Friday, Feb. 10, 2023. Borsch was declared an asset of “intangible national heritage” by UNESCO in July 2022, a decision which helped put Ukrainian food on the map. (AP Photo/Chris Warde-Jones)

Ukrainian chef Ievgen Klopotenko shops at a market in Kyiv, Ukraine on Monday, Feb. 6, 2023. Klopotenko has been outspoken during the Russian invasion in promoting national dishes, especially borsch, as a way of establishing a definite identity for Ukraine. (AP Photo/Chris Warde-Jones)

Tetyana Motorna appears at her stall in Volodymirsky market in Kyiv, Ukraine, on Feb. 9, 2023. Motorna, who has sold pickled fruit and vegetables for decades, supports chef Ievgen Klopotenko’s work to secure borsch as a national treasure for Ukraine. (AP Photo/Chris Warde-Jones)

Ukrainian chef Ievgen Klopotenko adds sour cream to borsch in his home in Kyiv, Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 5, 2023. Klopotenko has been outspoken during the Russian invasion in promoting national dishes, especially borsch, as a way of establishing a definite identity for Ukraine. (AP Photo/Chris Warde-Jones)

Ukrainian chef Ievgen Klopotenko poses with a tray of Pampushky bread in his kitchen in Kyiv, Ukraine on Feb. 5, 2023. Klopotenko has been outspoken during the Russian invasion in promoting national dishes, especially borsch, as a way of establishing a definite identity for Ukraine. (AP Photo/Chris Warde-Jones)

KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — Don’t tell Ievgen Klopotenko that borsch is just food. For him, that bowl of beet-and-meat soup is the embodiment of everything Ukraine is fighting for.