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Who Stole the Kishka?" is a polka song written in the 1950s by Walter Dana with lyrics by Walt Solek. [12] [14] [15] [16] It has been recorded and performed by various bands. One popular version familiar to American radio audiences was from a 1963 recording by Grammy award-winning polka artist Frankie Yankovic.
The word kopytka [kopyto "hoof", kopytko "little hoof", neuter singular nouns] is Polish for "little hooves," such as those of a small hoofed animal (for example, a goat). Kapytki is the Belarusian word for the same concept. Both refer to the structure of these dumplings, which are formed in the shape of hooves.
Maja blanca is relatively easy to prepare. A coconut milk (not coconut cream) and cornstarch mixture is heated to boiling over a low flame while stirring. Agar (gulaman in Filipino) can be substituted for cornstarch. [2] Corn kernels, milk, and sugar are also often added, though these are not traditionally part of the recipe. [4]
Polonaise sauce (French: sauce à la polonaise) is a sauce that originated in Poland and became popular in France in the 18th century. [1] The sauce consists of melted butter, chopped boiled eggs, bread crumbs, salt, lemon juice and herbs such as thyme, basil and parsley.
Lumpiang keso is a Filipino deep-fried appetizer consisting of a stick of cheese wrapped in a thin egg crêpe. It is more commonly known as cheese sticks , cheese lumpia , or cheese turon . It is usually served warm and crispy, with a dipping sauce made from a mixture of banana ketchup and mayonnaise .
An Upper Silesian version using breadcrumbs instead of groat is called żymlok from "żymła" – bread roll . myśliwska is a smoked, dried pork sausage, similar to kabanos but much thicker. kiełbasa biała , a white sausage sold uncooked and often used in soups such as barszcz biały ', probably of Bavarian or Thuringian origin.
Uszka or vushka (Polish: Uszka ⓘ; Ukrainian: Вушка; Belarusian: Вушкі) (meaning "little ears") are small dumplings [1] (a very small and twisted version of pierogi) usually filled with flavourful wild forest mushrooms and/or minced meat.
Kalduny or kolduny (Belarusian: калдуны́, Polish: kołduny, Lithuanian: koldūnai) are dumplings stuffed with meat, mushrooms or other ingredients, made in Belarusian, Lithuanian, and Polish cuisines, akin to the Polish pierogi, Russian pelmeni [1] and the Ukrainian varenyky.