Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
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.
Coddle – Irish stew with no fixed recipe, built around boiled sausages; Corn dog – Deep-fried, corn-battered hot dog on a stick; Cozido – Dish made of various meats and vegetables of Spanish and Portuguese origins; Currywurst – Fast food dish of German origin
Polish cuisine is rich in meat, especially pork, chicken and game, in addition to a wide range of vegetables, spices, fungi and mushrooms, and herbs. [1] It is also characterised by its use of various kinds of pasta, cereals, kasha and pulses. [2] In general, Polish cuisine makes extensive use of butter, cream, eggs, and seasoning.
Kaszanka is a traditional blood sausage in Central and Eastern European cuisine. It is made of a mixture of pig's blood, pork offal (commonly liver), and buckwheat or barley stuffed in a pig intestine.
A Filipino thick pork tenderloin soup originating from the Chinese-Filipino community of Binondo, Manila. It is made from lean pork pounded with a mallet until tender. It is marinated in soy sauce, garlic, black pepper, rice wine or vinegar, and onions before being covered with egg whites or starch (usually starch from corn, sweet potato or ...
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.
A woman grinding kasha, an 18th-century drawing by J.-P. Norblin. In Polish, cooked buckwheat groats are referred to as kasza gryczana. Kasza can apply to many kinds of groats: millet (kasza jaglana), barley (kasza jęczmienna), pearl barley (kasza jęczmienna perłowa, pęczak), oats (kasza owsiana), as well as porridge made from farina (kasza manna). [4]
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.