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Cooked Fruit in Poland - Fruity Fillings, Flan, Pies, Tarts and JAM


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posts: 79
 
Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 18:28  #31

Amazing is not the word, no offence my Scottish brotha!! LOL

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szkotja2007
  Mar 19, 08, 18:30  #32

Myslem ty jest nie serious ;-)

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miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 19, 08, 18:31  #33

szkotja2007 wrote:
Myslem ty jest nie serious ;-)

well, I understood what you were trying to communicate, so....it is good enough for me for now and it can only get better.
Seanus wrote:
Amazing is not the word, no offence my Scottish brotha!! LOL

we defninately have different methods:P LOL
I used positive inforcement;)

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 18:35  #34

Nah, seriously, I never knock people for trying to learn. Too many Brits are inept when it comes to a second language and hats off to my Scottish colleague for attempting this difficult language.

Ye kent a wizne haein a go at ye, fit ye pit doon wiz a guid try. Dinna gi up min

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 18:37  #35

Seanus wrote:
Ye kent a wizne haein a go at ye, fit ye pit doon wiz a guid try. Dinna gi up min

Say what? Scottish speak, I take it.

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miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 19, 08, 18:40  #36

Seanus wrote:
Ye kent a wizne haein a go at ye, fit ye pit doon wiz a guid try. Dinna gi up min

I was able to understand it before and now I think I simply regressed:).

Sure, I admire anybody who attemps to learn Polish since it is one of the most difficult languages IMO.

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 18:40  #37

Yeah, when the mood takes the fancy, I jot down random Scots. I gotta read Robbie Shepherd again.

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szkotja2007
  Mar 19, 08, 18:42  #38

Seanus wrote:
Ye kent a wizne haein a go at ye, fit ye pit doon wiz a guid try. Dinna gi up min

LOL
I am just grateful for any help at all !

I think my Polish friends are being too kind, as they tell me I speak good Polish when I know myself its rubbish. I only tend to try to speak it with friends I know well and dont speak it around Pl people I dont really know.
This can be quite funny when another Pl joins the group and starts talking in Pl thinking the Scots guy nie rozumie.

Apologies for going way off topic, I am sure admin will do the necessaries ;-)

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 18:44  #39

Establish a correlation with jam and I'll be impressed. Maybe the girls think ur efforts are sweet like jam. What do u think girls?

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miranda
  Mar 19, 08, 18:44  #40

szkotja2007 wrote:
Apologies for going way off topic, I am sure admin will do the necessaries ;-)

well, are there any good Polish jams in Scottland?

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 18:47  #41

Aye, wiv plinty o yon Deli's miranda. Air a ower the place. A wiz in Aiberdeen iv late un a saw a few. No problem to find them

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 18:48  #42

szkotja2007 wrote:

I think my Polish friends are being too kind, as they tell me I speak good Polish when I know myself its rubbish. I only tend to try to speak it with friends I know well and dont speak it around Pl people I dont really know.
This can be quite funny when another Pl joins the group and starts talking in Pl thinking the Scots guy nie rozumie.

Learning a language is always difficult (unless you happen to be a small child) so be happy with any progress you make :)

Seanus wrote:
Yeah, when the mood takes the fancy, I jot down random Scots.

Its an eye sore but I think I got the gist of it :)
But then, I'm Polish so I can't make fun of any other language (or dialect as the case would be)

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 18:54  #43

It's not so different

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szkotja2007
  Mar 19, 08, 18:56  #44

Seanus wrote:
Robbie Shepherd

Hero.
Seanus wrote:
Air a ower the place.

Furry boots ?

OK, so back to Jam ...................

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 18:59  #45

Seanus wrote:
It's not so different

Polish and English or Scottish and English ;)

Reading in Polish makes my eyes hurt sometimes.

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 19:01  #46

Furry boots, that's no way to talk about Spanish women Szkotja2007, hehehe.

Jam, yeah, they have lovely peach jam by Łowicz and wild strawberry jam too. The Poles make great use of fruit

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miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 19, 08, 19:10  #47

Seanus wrote:
Jam, yeah, they have lovely peach jam by Łowicz and wild strawberry jam too. The Poles make great use of fruit

you are such a fake:P
Osiol is gonna kill you tommorrow once he sees yet another thread of his going down the drain. You know how sensitive he is;). And it is all your fault;)

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Filios1
  Mar 19, 08, 19:12  #48

The top five apple producing countries in the world are:
(based on est 2004/2005 crop data)
China
United States
Poland
Turkey
Italy

-No wonder there are so many apple juices coming from dear Polska...
Seanus wrote:
The Poles make great use of fruit


Got that right! Nothing is wasted, and everything tastes delicious.. I think I will need to stop at the store tomorrow to grab some jam and have it for breakfast : )

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 19:13  #49

What, Osioł often writes to me on PM, expressing his love for ripe round peaches, LOL.

I was on thread.

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miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 19, 08, 19:14  #50

Filios1 wrote:
I think I will need to stop at the store tomorrow to grab some jam and have it for breakfast : )

I love breakfast with jam and not only on bread:)

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 19:15  #51

Filios1 wrote:
The top five apple producing countries in the world are:

My grandma has an apple orchard. Best 'backyard' ever.

Filios1 wrote:


Got that right! Nothing is wasted, and everything tastes delicious..

If its in season, stick it in a jar. How else were people back then supposed to eat fruit during the winter?

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 19:16  #52

It's a nice start to the day for sure. Good on muffins

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miranda
Edited by: miranda  Mar 19, 08, 19:19  #53

Seanus wrote:
What, Osioł often writes to me on PM, expressing his love for ripe round peaches, LOL.

you are one lucky man:P LOL
Mali wrote:
If its in season, stick it in a jar. How else were people back then supposed to eat fruit during the winter?

My family members put almost anything in jars and my cousin commented that if they could they would put grass there too;D

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 19:21  #54

miranda wrote:
My family members pput almost anything in jars and my cousion commented that if they could they would put grass there too;D

pickled grass could easily become a delicacy....lol

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 19:23  #55

I think Osioł would be interested in kompot, the use of fruit is fantastic as Fil1 said. Osioł, kompot is very much in ur sphere of interest. Pear stuff, mmm

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 19:25  #56

Seanus wrote:
kompot

strawberry!

There's also sour cherry, blueberry, rhubarb, raspberry, mixed berry.
any others that I missed? ....Miranda?

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Filios1
Edited by: Filios1  Mar 19, 08, 19:27  #57

Has anyone ever had strawberry or blueberry, or both together, in kompot form, with some kluski (noodles) as a soup? mmmm, I had a grandma from southern region of Poland who made the best strawberry soup..
i don't know if this is just regionally though?

Mali wrote:
There's also sour cherry, blueberry, rhubarb, raspberry, mixed berry.


there is also one for wielkanoc (christmas eve) that has plums i believe?
anyone??

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Seanus GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 19:28  #58

Sour Miranda, nah, she's just bitter cuz she doesn't speak Scottish, LOL.

They don't use apples for kompot, right?

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osiol GOLD MEMBER
  Mar 19, 08, 19:28  #59

Seanus wrote:
Osioł, kompot is very much in ur sphere of interest

Yes. Only I know it under the name compost of fruit.
What's all this about peaches anyway? You're right that they're better than nectarines.
More importantly, what has all this Scots dialect got to do with Polish jam?

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Mali
  Mar 19, 08, 19:29  #60

Seanus wrote:
Sour Miranda, nah, she's just bitter cuz she doesn't speak Scottish, LOL.

LOL

Filios1 wrote:

Has anyone ever had strawberry or blueberry, or both together, in kompot form, with some kluski (noodles) as a soup? mmmm, I had a grandma from southern region of Poland who made the best strawberry soup..
i don't know if this is just regionally though?

I've never heard of that.

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