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Halušky. Bryndzové halušky: potato dumplings with bryndza (a sheep's milk cheese); Strapačky: potato dumplings with sauerkraut; Goose or duck feast (husacie or kačacie hody): festive menu consisting of roasted goose (husacina or husacie mäso) or duck meat (kačacie mäso), goose liver (husacia pečienka), greasy lokše, stewed red cabbage, and sour cherry and poppy seed strudel ...
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Sweet lokšas with sugar and poppy seeds Lokša with chicken liver and corn salad. Lokša or lokše (Slovak pronunciation: and respectively; may be written in English as loksha or lokshe) is a type of potato pancake like flatbread, popular in the cuisine of Slovakia and South Moravian Region of the Czech Republic.
Today the Slovaks call the soft dough dumplings with boiled potatoes and sheep's cheese bryndzové halušky, while the local Hungarians call it sztrapacska. The Slovak strapačky is a dish made mainly of dumplings with potatoes, as opposed to its Hungarian counterpart the nokedli , which do not contain potatoes.
Common foods used include meats, vegetables, mushrooms, fruits, berries and herbs. [9] [10] In Ukraine, bread is a staple food, there are many different types of bread, and Ukraine is sometimes referred to as the "breadbasket of Europe." [9] Pickled vegetables are utilized, particularly when fresh vegetables are not in season. [9]
[6] [7] [8] In certain regions of the Antalya Province in South Turkey, holuşka is made with larger dumplings than its counterparts in Central and Eastern Europe. [ 9 ] A haluskar is a kitchen utensil used to drop batter into stock to create the noodles.
A pro-western career diplomat defeated a close ally of Slovakia’s populist Prime Minister Robert Fico in the first round of the presidential election Sunday to set up a runoff between the two to ...
Slovakia is famous for gnocchi-like halušky pasta. Slovenia is known for German- and Italian-influenced cuisine, Poland for pierogis which are a cross between ravioli and empanada. Liechtenstein and German-speaking Switzerland are famous for Rösti and French-speaking Switzerland for fondue and raclettes. Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine; Austrian cuisine