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First time eating Polish food


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learning
  Feb 13, 08, 18:45  #1

What should I look for?

I am located in the US and are looking to eat a polish dish for the first time.

Any suggestions?

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sledz
  Feb 13, 08, 18:46  #2

Try some Pierogis :)

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Glim
  Feb 13, 08, 18:56  #3

Kie³basa: Polish sausages - white sausages are especially very tasty. They go well with pickled cucumbers (gherkins) in combination with beer or vodka and fresh air. Absolutly delicious man..

Bigos: appetizing, seasoned "hunter" stew made from sauerkraut with chunks of various meats and sausages, extremely traditional - This is heaven to me, real hearty food great fo the cold, even better for the tastebuds!!!

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El Gato
  Feb 13, 08, 19:11  #4

Glim wrote:
Bigos: appetizing, seasoned "hunter" stew made from sauerkraut with chunks of various meats and sausages, extremely traditional - This is heaven to me, real hearty food great fo the cold, even better for the tastebuds!!!


Gotta love it. I eat that all the time during winter.

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telefonitika
  Feb 13, 08, 19:39  #5

Glim wrote:
Bigos: appetizing, seasoned "hunter" stew made from sauerkraut with chunks of various meats and sausages, extremely traditional - This is heaven to me, real hearty food great fo the cold, even better for the tastebuds!!!



and best .. when reheated esp on the third day ... :D eat with some good polish bread

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Shawn_H
Edited by: Shawn_H  Feb 13, 08, 19:41  #6

telefonitika wrote:
reheated esp on the third day

Very true.

Glim wrote:
well with pickled cucumbers

not a pickle kind of guy....

But...
Glim wrote:
combination with beer or vodka

I can agree with that. But why "or" should be "and"

;-)

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Glim
  Feb 13, 08, 19:50  #7

Ahhaa, indeed..
;-)

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Eurola PREMIUM
  Feb 13, 08, 20:13  #8

learning wrote:
I am located in the US and are looking to eat a polish dish for the first time.


Jeez, you mean there are places in the US, where polish food is still not readily available? :)
Enjoy the experience! Make sure you try some mushroom soup too.

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plk123
  Feb 13, 08, 22:41  #9

Glim wrote:
Bigos: appetizing, seasoned "hunter" stew made from sauerkraut with chunks of various meats and sausages, extremely traditional - This is heaven to me, real hearty food great fo the cold, even better for the tastebuds!!!

what, no wódka with bigos? how polish are you? ;) :D

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learning
  Feb 13, 08, 23:26  #10

I have one question...

I am very open to new things and I love foreign foods and new experiences...

But are any of these going to give me culture shock in my mouth?
I'll still try them regardless.

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plk123
  Feb 13, 08, 23:28  #11

not pierogi, not kielbasa except you'll give up the plastic wrapped crap for good. bigos is the only possiblity out of the three but if you like sour kraut then you'll be ok. bigos should also have mushrooms in it so if you;re allergic to those find some without them.

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Glim
  Feb 14, 08, 09:01  #12

ahhh bigos.... mmmm...
*starts drooling over keyboard*

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JuliePotocka
  Feb 20, 08, 15:43  #13

Make sure you have a cast iron stomach, as some of us will go crazy with hot peppers (such as Scottish Bonnets) in our cooking around special times of the year.

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EbonyandBathory
  Feb 20, 08, 16:07  #14

Try Golumpki, which is meat and potatoes stuffed into cabbage. It tastes like happiness. So good. Personally, you give me a plate of kei³basa, some golumpki, and a bottle of Chopin and I'm a pig in slop.

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Zgubiony
  Feb 21, 08, 08:43  #15

EbonyandBathory wrote:
Golumpki


Go³±bki :)


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starchild
  Feb 21, 08, 08:49  #16

You say go³±bki, I say golumpki (well, not me, but... you know)

You Say Golabki, I Say Golumpki

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EbonyandBathory
  Feb 21, 08, 13:12  #17

I don't care how you say it, I just care about how I can get it into my mouth.

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plk123
  Feb 21, 08, 13:59  #18

EbonyandBathory wrote:
Try Golumpki, which is meat and potatoes stuffed into cabbage. It tastes like happiness. So good. Personally, you give me a plate of kei³basa, some golumpki, and a bottle of Chopin and I'm a pig in slop.

beef amd rice or barley.. with potatoes it's not polish.

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lowfunk99
  Feb 21, 08, 17:47  #19

My family always made go³±bki with rice. How does it taste with barley?

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Goonie
  Feb 21, 08, 23:16  #20

i've been craving red beet soup lately MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMmmmmmmmmmmmmm

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JuliePotocka
  Feb 22, 08, 00:03  #21

I like blankies (stuffed cabbages), but with red cabbages.

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puddddddin [Guest]
  Feb 22, 08, 11:58  #22

All that was mentoned above is excellent - you can also try krokiety - filled with cabbage an mushrooms or with meat. Its a pancake filled with the filling, folded and then covered with breadcrumbs and fried - I love them! In fact, I like a lot of the polish food but some I won't try - like flaki, which is a kind of soup (in Uk, we call it tripe or cows stomach), and Glonka (pigs knuckles!)... you get my point, but i've heard that they are good.

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Gosia
Edited by: Gosia  Feb 22, 08, 15:12  #23

pierogi with sour kraut (you have to heat it on o pan under a lid for quite a long time - i don't know the exact word for this, in Polish it is dusię) and dried mushrooms. mmmm delicious. even better when you fry them on some olive oil on a pan:)

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Polish_Man
  Feb 23, 08, 18:16  #24

I don`t know. Food in Poland is so much better than for example in London, and think, big part of Europe.

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l3niwi3c
Edited by: l3niwi3c  Feb 23, 08, 19:44  #25

Your don't know what is good!
Schabowe, Pierogi with meat - mmmmmmmm delicious

sorry, but my English is weak. Please correct me ;)

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JuliePotocka
  Feb 24, 08, 01:47  #26

No way am I correcting you - you were able to portray your feelings across perfectly!!

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dzindzer
  Mar 15, 08, 00:25  #27

stuffed cabbage is da shiznit!! miam :))
I'm also a pretty big fan of tripe...didn't think it would be as good as it is

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TripTic
  Mar 15, 08, 03:57  #28

...so how about: Fasola po bretońsku, ³azanki, placki ziemniaczane, racuchy ? Nobody tried them yet ?

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hu_man
Edited by: hu_man  Mar 15, 08, 05:46  #29

plk123 wrote:
you'll give up the plastic wrapped crap for good


I have to say since i have moved to poland, i feel realy good health wise i stopped eating crap from packets .. every thing i eat is fresh...

lol...thats not to say i used to eat off food

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Matyjasz
  Mar 15, 08, 11:26  #30

plk123 wrote:
beef amd rice or barley.. with potatoes it's not polish.


I think that you could get really surprised plk. People from different parts of Poland prepare traditional dishes in different ways. For example, it was unthinkable for my family from Lubuskie region that we eat potato pancakes with sugar here in Wielkopolska and I was equally surprised when I found out that my girlfriends family from Silesia eat their chicken soup with potatoes instead of noodles…

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