A.C.
My husband lived in Siberian Russia for a few years, so I think I can help :)
Borscht (beet and cabbage soup)
Blini (Russian pancakes) - you can serve with cooked ground meat, mashed potatoes with onion, berries, or chocolate sauce.
Pashka- a cheesecake-like dessert; it is a special dish you make once a year, for Easter, and eat it with the Russian Easter cake.
Pierogi (you can even buy these in the frozen foods section next to the ravioli)
www.allrecipes.com has a good selection of recipes, just type in "Russian". I also have quite a few Russian cookbooks if you cant find one of those recipes online, let me know.
Too bad you don't live nearer to me, we have so much cool Russian stuff!I
P.S. My husband says " I don't know what to tell you because no American grade-schooler would want to eat anything from Russia" lol. He is trying to remember a yummy dessert he used to eat over there- I will update my answer if he finds it.
L., he never could remember what that dessert was. I took a quick look at my cookbooks to see what might keep well. From what I have read, desserts in Russia are usually very light, many are based on fruit, and served with tea. Tea-drinking is very big over there. You could possibly make the Russian Teacakes and serve a hot drink out of a teapot. I found a recipe for a spiced honey drink, the cookbook said is one of Russia's oldest drinks and in old Russia vendors would sell it in the streets. Let me know if you need the recipe, it looks very easy. The Russian Easter cake also looks easy and like it would stay good overnight. Good luck!